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posted by chromas on Monday July 29 2019, @06:06AM   Printer-friendly

Shaping light with a Smartlens

In a study recently published in Nature Photonics, [...] researchers demonstrate an adjustable technique to manipulate light without any mechanical movement. In this approach, coined Smartlens, a current is passed through a well-optimized micrometer-scale resistor, and the heating locally changes the optical properties of the transparent polymer plate holding the resistor.

In much the same way as a mirage bends light passing through hot air to create illusions of distant lakes, this microscale hot region is able to deviate light. Within milliseconds, a simple slab of polymer can be turned into a lens and back: small, micrometer-scale Smartlenses heat up and cool down quickly and with minimal power consumption. They can even be fabricated in arrays, and the authors show that several objects located at very different distances can be brought into focus within the same image by activating the Smartlenses located in front of each of them, even if the scene is in colours.

By modelling the diffusion of heat and the propagation of light and using algorithms inspired by the laws of natural selection the authors show they can go way beyond simple lenses: a properly engineered resistor can shape light with a very high level of control and achieve a wide variety of optical functions. For instance, if the right resistor is imprinted on it, a piece of polymer could be activated or deactivated at will to generate a given "freeform" and correct specific defects in our eyesight, or the aberrations of an optical instrument.

Tunable and free-form planar optics[$], Nature photonics (DOI: 10.1038/s41566-019-0486-3)


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  • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 29 2019, @01:07PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 29 2019, @01:07PM (#872607)

    All of that presumably embedded in a _free-floating_ contact lens?

    If you presume silly things, that's on you. It would obviously be more practical as eyeglasses than contact lenses.

    Now, pray tell, why are you not, first, manufacturing an equally complexly fine-tuned contact lens _without_ the need for constant adjustment?

    They already make equally complex eyeglass lenses without constant adjustment, although the normal single-axis astigmatism correction is enough for most people.
    The benefit for eyeglasses is not the additional complexity available, it's the adjustability.
    You know a lot of people with severely limited focal range currently use multiple eyeglass prescriptions for different tasks, right? Whether in the form of bifocal/trifocal glasses, contacts + reading glasses, etc.
    Depending on the power requirements, it seems like it could be pretty nifty for some of those people. Even manually selected prescriptions, without extra glasses to carry around (and risk losing) when not using them, could be worth the obvious downside of a powered system. Combined with eye-tracking, etc., you could even slave the eyeglass focus to convergence or focus for an automatic system.

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