Off-axis Explained: What it is & How it Contributes to Comatic Aberration

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Off-axis refers to any light ray that does not travel along the optical axis, which is the central line of an optical system. Comatic aberration, or coma, occurs when light rays that are off-axis create distorted images, particularly in the periphery of the field of view. The optical axis is defined as the line that passes symmetrically through the center of a lens or mirror, while off-axis rays can be parallel or at an angle to this line. Coma is absent along the optical axis, highlighting the difference between on-axis and off-axis light behavior. Understanding these concepts is crucial for addressing optical aberrations in lens design and performance.
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As I was studying Comatic aberration, in the definition of coma the word off-axis is used which I couldnot understand. What does off axis means? and how does it contribute to the comatic aberration? I also want to know about off axis diagrammatically.Thanks......
 
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By "axis" I assume you mean principle axis this beng a line drawn at 90 degrees through the centre of the lens/mirror.Off axis therefore would refer to a line parallel to the principle axis but above or below it or it could refer to a line at an angle to the principle axis.
 
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roshan2004 said:
As I was studying Comatic aberration, in the definition of coma the word off-axis is used which I couldnot understand. What does off axis means? and how does it contribute to the comatic aberration? I also want to know about off axis diagrammatically.Thanks......

Diagram and explanation...

http://www.telescope-optics.net/coma.htm

...
 
roshan2004 said:
As I was studying Comatic aberration, in the definition of coma the word off-axis is used which I couldnot understand. What does off axis means? and how does it contribute to the comatic aberration? I also want to know about off axis diagrammatically.Thanks......

As Creator's posted link states, the 'axis' refers to the "optical axis", which is an imaginary line that defines the centerline of the optical system. For rotationally symmetric elements (round lenses, etc), the optical axis passes through the center of each element.

Coma is an aberration that is identically zero on the optical axis.
 
I am still confused about optical axis and off axis.Are these terms same or different?
 
roshan2004 said:
I am still confused about optical axis and off axis.Are these terms same or different?

Principle axis,optical axis or just axis call it what you will,it is the line that passes symmetrically(at 90 degrees)through the centre of the lens/mirror.A ray passing through the optical axis of a lens will be refracted but it will not be deviated through an angle or laterally displaced,it will pass straight through.A ray traveling along the optical axis of a curved mirror will reflect back along the optical axis.Off axis refers to any ray that is not traveling along the optical axis.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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