This is a somewhat technical article that I found very interesting, it appears some Harvard researches have found a way to use nano technology to control chromatic aberrations (CA) in optical designs, the claim is it could reduce the amount of complex design used in many optical instruments (including scopes?) to cut down on weight and eventually cost I would assume, this could be great news for future optics if this technology could be licensed by manufacturers:
https://www.seas.harvard.edu/news/2...-aberrations-across-all-kinds-of-lenses?nr=nr
For those of you who do not care about CA, might I propose that while you may not "see it" it certainly may have an impact on the overall image, take a look at the screenshot from the article below and tell me which image looks more "clear" to you, so while CA may not bother you in general it does have an impact on how the perceived resolution/clarity of the image is especially at the edges between high and low contrast transition.
https://www.seas.harvard.edu/news/2...-aberrations-across-all-kinds-of-lenses?nr=nr
For those of you who do not care about CA, might I propose that while you may not "see it" it certainly may have an impact on the overall image, take a look at the screenshot from the article below and tell me which image looks more "clear" to you, so while CA may not bother you in general it does have an impact on how the perceived resolution/clarity of the image is especially at the edges between high and low contrast transition.
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