Gawne Timothy J, Banks Martin S
Department of Optometry and Vision Science, University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama, USA; email:
Herbert Wertheim School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA.
Annu Rev Vis Sci. 2024 Sep;10(1):199-212. doi: 10.1146/annurev-vision-101222-052228. Epub 2024 Sep 2.
The study of biological optics would be complicated enough if light only came in a single wavelength. However, altering the wavelength (or distribution of wavelengths) of light has multiple effects on optics, including on diffraction, scattering (of various sorts), transmission through and reflection by various media, fluorescence, and waveguiding properties, among others. In this review, we consider just one wavelength-dependent optical effect: longitudinal chromatic aberration (LCA). All vertebrate eyes that have been tested have significant LCA, with shorter (bluer) wavelengths of light focusing closer to the front of the eye than longer (redder) wavelengths. We consider the role of LCA in the visual system in terms of both how it could degrade visual acuity and how biological systems make use of it.
如果光仅具有单一波长,那么生物光学的研究就已经足够复杂了。然而,改变光的波长(或波长分布)会对光学产生多种影响,包括对衍射、(各种类型的)散射、通过各种介质的透射和反射、荧光以及波导特性等。在本综述中,我们仅考虑一种与波长相关的光学效应:纵向色差(LCA)。所有经过测试的脊椎动物眼睛都有显著的纵向色差,较短(较蓝)波长的光聚焦在眼睛前部比更长(更红)波长的光更近。我们从它如何降低视力以及生物系统如何利用它这两个方面来考虑纵向色差在视觉系统中的作用。