Abstract
Stray light in spectacle lenses may affect the overall vision. It may also affect the measurement of ocular stray light, contrast sensitivity, or glare sensitivity. This article describes common stray light characteristics for glass and plastic spectacle lenses and compares this to the stray light characteristics of the eye, which are well known from the literature. Stray light is described by the skirts of the point-spread function (PSF), which were measured for angles from 4 degrees to 30 degrees. The PSF of spectacle lenses appears to follow the equation PSF = a(10). (theta/10)b, with a(10) and b representing fitting parameters and theta representing the stray light angle. The slope b is on average -2, which similar to that of the eye. For clean spectacle lenses, the PSF is usually at least an order of magnitude lower than that of the eye, whereas "as worn" (uncleaned) spectacle lenses may approach the PSF of the eye. To reach the PSF of the eye, the spectacle lens needs to be contaminated by as much as one or two fingerprints. The article also shows that plastic spectacle lenses degrade much faster than glass spectacle lenses when looking at the amount of stray light.
Published Version
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