Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/06/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]As usual there is more behind a word than many people can imagine.The visual spectrum comprises an infinite number of wavelenghts, some of which are designated a colour name. In optical theory important wavelenghts (the ones the designer uses to compute his raytracing) are designated letters and are called Fraunhofer lines. Normally glass will exhibit chromatic aberrations (longitudinal: along the optical axis and lateral: changing image height). This last error (an image point is represented on film as a series of coloured circles of different radius) give the well known colour fringing. Normallnses are corrected for two wavelenghts (Fraunhofer lines). mostly F (hydrogen: blue) and C (hydrogen: red). For achromatic correction the F and C imges are equal and so all wavelenghts between these two are also corrected. But there are many wavelenghts still uncorrected. That is called the secondary spectrum or 'amount of residual colour'. A lens that is apochromatically corrected, has three Fraunhofer lines (C, D and F) where aberrations are zero. But there is still some residual colour left. Only with 4 Fraunhofer lines a theoretically almost perfect lens can be created. Officially only the Zeis Sonnar 5.6/250 Superachromat is of thie latter type. In fact we have three steps of chromatic correction: achromatic, apochromatic and superachromatic. Now it is possible to reduce the amount of residual colour without going the full apochromatic way, that is using special glass with apochromatic characteristics. While the effect of the corrections looks like an apochromatic solution, in reality the aberration graphs will show you that only two Fraunhofer lines are being corrected. But the lateral chromatic aberration is smaller than expected while using normal glass types (quite often fluorite or aspherics are used). That is the way of most japanese manufacturers. Often the good level of correction hold for some distances and most importantly only for some apertures (mostly f/8 or smaller). Eric's remark that the coverage of image field is also a criterion is not correct. It goes without saying that Leica lenses are true APO lenses with three Fraunhofer lines corrected and a very high degree of correction of residual chromatic aberrations and the secondary spectrum. Erwin