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Focus Spread
When a lens is used to form an image of some object, the distance from the object to the lens $u$, the distance from the lens to the image (i.e. film plane) $v$, and the focal length $f$ are related by: \[\frac {1}{f} = \frac{1}{u}+\frac{1}{v}\] which can be rewritten as e.g.: \[v=\frac{uf}{u-f}\]
\[N=\frac{f}{d}\]
The depth of field $d_F$ is simply the relative distance between the front and rear limits $d_f$ and $d_r$ respectively: [\d_F = d_r -d_f\]
\[\text{DOF} \approx \frac{2u^{2}Nc}{f^{2}}\]
The depth of field, $D$, is directly related to the depth of focus, $\Delta d$, \[z=\frac{\Delta d}{2c}\]
fun = @(c, d) d ./ (2*c) c_normal = 0.089 c_critical = 0.030
Practical use
A (view) camera is focused by
- Set focus on the most distant object in the scene for which an acceptable sharpness is still required.
- (This object will be at… $D_{far}$
- Jada jada…using a caliper/ruler…$d_{far}$
- Take note on how far the lens is extended from the
- Set focus on the most nearby object in the scene for which an acceptable sharpness is required.
- (This object will be at… $D_{close}$
- Jada jada…$d_{close}$
- Calculate, or measure, the depth of focus: \[\Delta d = d_{far} - d_{close}\]
