Physics, asked by ananyajadav2468, 2 months ago

find the power of convex lens with focal length 5cm​

Answers

Answered by anshsrivastava464
1

Divide the diagonal measure of the sensor/film into the focal length. On a modern “full-frame” sensor a 50mm lens would be approximately 1.1–1.3x (“full-frame” is not the same from brand to brand, since different companies buy their sensors from various sources)(that’s right, neither the big-N nor the big-C make their own sensors). The same 50mm lens on a smaller APSC sensor becomes 1.4–1.6x. Keep in mind, this only holds true for normally designed “rectilinear” lenses, and does not necessarily apply to “fish-eye,” rare annular lenses, etc. Also, very important to understand when adapting lenses from one company to another brand/format camera, two lenses of identical focal length, i.e., “50mm,” while of identical magnification on a given sensor/film format, if one is designed for a smaller sensor/film format it probably will not project an image circle large enough to cover the larger sensor/film format. In plain language, lenses designed for larger sensors/film formats will adapt nicely to smaller sensors/film formats (with a corrsponding increase in magnification), but if you reverse the process you’ll get varying degrees of “vignetting” (darkening) in the corners of the image, or at the edges and corners of the frame there will be no image at all.

In summary, the “magnification” of any standard camera lens can be determined by dividing the diagonal measurement of the sensor/film into the focal length of the lens.

I hope it helps

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Answered by randommaildude
11

Answer:

power= 0.20

Explanation:

formula of power is

power = 1 / focal_length

focal length= 5cm

power=1/5

=0.20

hope it helps you

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