Effective Focal Length of Multiple Lenses

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The discussion focuses on the effective focal length of a multiple lens system, as described by the formula 1/f(effective) = 1/f1 + 1/f2 + ... + 1/fn. The original poster initially questions the location of the resulting effective lens in a two-lens system. They experiment with different placements but ultimately realize that the formula applies only to thin lenses in contact with each other. This means the position of the effective lens is predefined in such cases. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding the conditions under which the effective focal length formula is applicable.
RWard29
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In my Optics book (Hecht, 4th edition) the author discusses how, when dealing with a multiple lens system (say, with n many lenses), one can think of the system as a single lens system, with an effective focal length given by:

1/f(effective) = 1/f1 + 1/f2 + ... + 1/fn

My question is this: Where is the resulting "effective" lens located, with respect to the original source (or with respect to the original lenses)? I am dealing with a simple two lens system, and I've tried placing the lens at the midpoint between the original two, and at the location of lens 1, but neither gives the correct answer.
 
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Nevermind. I just answered my own question; I read what I wanted to see, not what was actually there. The formula I quoted applies only to thin lenses which are in contact with each-other, in which case the position of said "effective" lens is already well-defined.
 
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