| "Hi Index" for Thinner Lenses | |||||
High
index lenses are manufactured with modern materials that make them thinner
and lighter in weight than was previously possible. These new lenses provide visual and
cosmetic benefits for stronger corrections because they are thinner and
flatter than conventional lenses.
This greatly reduces the "Coke-bottle" effect
associated with thicker, conventional lenses and provides improved
clarity across the lens surface, especially in higher lens
prescriptions.Why can high-index lenses be made thinner? Eyeglass lenses correct vision by bending light as it passes through the lens. The amount that light must be bent to focus correctly on the inside back of your eye (retina) and give you good vision is determined by the lens prescription. Nearsighted prescriptions decrease light bending ("-" lenses) and farsighted prescriptions increase light bending ("+" lenses.) The real secret behind high-index lenses is something called "index of refraction." A lens material with a high index of refraction bends light more so less of it is needed to produce a given lens prescription.
Aspheric lenses In an aspheric lens, the lens curvature is not constant across the whole lens. The curvature gradually changes from the center of the lens to the edge of the lens. Overall, aspheric lenses have flatter curves. They are thinner and do not appear to "bulge" out of the frame as much as conventional lenses do. While high-index lenses benefit nearsighted wearers the most, they offer significant advantages to farsighted wearers also. The distance a prescription lens is positioned in front of the wearer's eye has cosmetic ramifications. Strong farsighted lenses tend to enlarge the wearer's eyes, producing a magnified appearance. Strong nearsighted lenses do just the opposite: they minify the wearer's eyes making them look smaller. To decrease both magnification and minification effects, a lens should be positioned as close to the eye as possible. In many cases, an aspheric lens design will result in a shorter distance between the wearer's eye and the lens...resulting in a more pleasing cosmetic effect. In Conclusion |
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