DK Science: Lenses

A lens is a piece of transparent plastic or glass that can make things seem to change size. It works by bending light rays so they appear to come from a slightly different place. Some lenses make things look nearer and bigger. Others make things look smaller and further away. Without their spectacle lenses, many people would be unable to see clearly, read books, or drive safely.

CONTACT LENS

A contact lens is a tiny piece of plastic or glass that rests on the front of the eyeball. It bends light rays before they enter the eye in ways that help the wearer to see more clearly.

CONCAVE AND CONVEX LENSES

The two main types of lens are called concave and convex. A concave lens is thin in the middle and thick at the edges, so it seems to “cave” inwards. It makes light rays bend outwards, or diverge. A convex lens works in the opposite way. It is thicker in the middle and thinner at the edges. Light rays passing through a convex lens bend inwards, or converge.

FRESNEL LENS

A lighthouse must send a long beam of light far out to sea. To do that a very large and heavy lens would normally be needed. Instead, lighthouses use a specially shaped Fresnel lens. It has steps like a staircase, each of which helps to bend the light into a single, powerful beam. A Fresnel lens can be made from glass or lightweight plastic.

SLIDE PROJECTOR

By shining a powerful beam of light through a transparent photographic slide, a projector can make a much larger image on a wall. The little image on the slide is shined through a concave lens, which spreads the light rays outwards. The further away the projector is from the wall, the bigger the image becomes.

MAGNIFYING GLASS

To magnify means to increase in apparent size. If you look closely at a magnifying glass, you can see that it is a large convex lens, thicker in the centre than at the edges. When you hold a magnifying glass over an object, it makes light rays from the object seem to come from a nearer point, causing it to look bigger than it really is.

Copyright © 2007 Dorling Kindersley