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Lens


LensAsymmetric

A (general, asymmetric) lens is a lamina formed by the intersection of two offset disks of unequal radii such that the intersection is not empty, one disk does not completely enclose the other, and the centers of curvatures are on opposite sides of the lens. If the centers of curvature are on the same side, a lune results.

The area of a general asymmetric lens obtained from circles of radii R and r and offset d can be found from the formula for circle-circle intersection, namely

A=A(R,d_1)+A(r,d_2)
(1)
=r^2cos^(-1)((d^2+r^2-R^2)/(2dr))+R^2cos^(-1)((d^2+R^2-r^2)/(2dR))-1/2sqrt((-d+r+R)(d+r-R)(d-r+R)(d+r+R)).
(2)

Similarly, the height of such a lens is

a=1/dsqrt(4d^2R^2-(d^2-r^2+R^2)^2)
(3)
=1/dsqrt((-d+r-R)(-d-r+R)(-d+r+R)(d+r+R)).
(4)
LensSymmetric

A symmetric lens is lens formed by the intersection of two equal disk. The area of a symmetric lens obtained from circles with radii a and offset d is given by

 A=a^2pi-2a^2tan^(-1)(d/(sqrt(4a^2-d^2)))-1/2dsqrt(4a^2-d^2),
(5)

and the height by

 h=sqrt(4a^2-d^2).
(6)

A special type of symmetric lens is the vesica piscis (Latin for "fish bladder"), corresponding to a disk offset which is equal to the disk radii.

A lens-shaped region also arises in the study of Bessel functions, is very important in the theory of Kapteyn series and the study of Kepler's equation, and is intimately related to the so-called Laplace limit.

In Season 4 episode "Power" of the television crime drama NUMB3RS, physicist Larry Fleinhardt discusses the religious symbology of the vesica piscis when main character Charles Eppes mentions he is constructing a Venn diagram.


See also

Arc, Circle, Circle-Circle Intersection, Circular Sector, Circular Segment, Double Bubble, Flower of Life, Goat Problem, Kapteyn Series, Kepler's Equation, Laplace Limit, Lemon Surface, Lune, Mohammed Sign, Moss's Egg, Reuleaux Triangle, Seed of Life, Semicircle, Triangle Arcs, Venn Diagram, Vesica Piscis

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Cite this as:

Weisstein, Eric W. "Lens." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. https://mathworld.wolfram.com/Lens.html

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