D.Phil. / That the eye is essentially a first-order optical instrument is evidenced by the success Gaussian optics has met with in optometry and ophthalmology. An unfortunate consequence of this approach is that a brief review of the literature on the topic of intraocular lens power calculation gives one the impression that the character of such a lens is described fully by its dioptric power. This is not so. Indeed, the idea that a thin refracting interface can somehow embody the optical character of the thick intraocular lens can, and in many ways has, limited the scope of intraocular lens power formula. The purpose of this dissertation is to apply the methods of linear algebra to the investigation of the first-order optical character of the stigmatic and astigmatic pseudophakic eye. This work attempts to lay a solid foundation for the study of the pseudophakic eye in the context of first-order astigmatic optics. While the majority of concepts and results of this dissertation are directly applicable to the study of the pseudophakic eye, an attempt has been made to ensure that the methods outlined in this work may be applied to the study of optical systems in the broader context of first-order optics. Central to this work are the members of the non-abelian symplectic group Sp(2n) under the operation of conventional matrix multiplication. The elements are evendimensional, non-singular symplectic matrices with unit determinant which are referred to here as ray transferences. These matrices act on the members of even-dimensional vector spaces so as to preserve a particular skew-symmetric, non-degenerate bilinear pairing referred to as the symplectic form. The laws that govern the operation of these matrices, the three symplectic relations, flow naturally from the structure of the symplectic group. From the ray transference four 2„e 2 fundamental properties of an optical system may be defined, the dilation A , the disjugacy B , the divergence C and the divarication D. A number of additional optical properties can be derived from the fundamental properties. Examples of derived properties include the dioptric power F , the negative of the divergence C and refractive state 0 F . The ray transference is used here in the derivation of a set of new intraocular lens formulae for the pseudophakic eye. These formulae are entirely general, working equally well in both stigmatic and astigmatic pseudophakic eyes in which additional (possibly astigmatic) intraocular devices may already be present. Formulae for both distant and near objects are provided. The constraints under which the divergence of a thick (possibly bitoric) intraocular lens is conserved despite changes in the lens are investigated. Furthermore, the constraints under which the refractive state of the pseudophakic is conserved in spite of changes in the thick intraocular lens are investigated. We find that there exist an infinite number of thick intraocular lenses that will produce a given refractive outcome, say emmetropia, in the pseudophakic eye. The basic theory of matrix differentiation with respect to a scalar variable is utilized in the study of the changes in the optical character of the pseudophakic eye following axial translation of a variety of intraocular lens systems. A novel method of representing the changes in the stigmatic and antistigmatic properties of refraction on account of axial translation and rotation of a toric intraocular lens in the astigmatic eye is presented and numerical examples are provided. The analysis permits the calculation of the ideal axial lens position and orientation in the astigmatic pseudophakic eye. Such methods will prove increasingly important in refractive data analysis, particularly in light of the development of continuously adjustable intraocular devices. / Prof. W.F. Harris
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:uj/uj:13498 |
Date | 27 October 2008 |
Source Sets | South African National ETD Portal |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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