Application of John P. Farquhar and Frank F. Crandell

305 F.2d 887, 49 C.C.P.A. 1318
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 25, 1962
DocketPatent Appeal 6803
StatusPublished

This text of 305 F.2d 887 (Application of John P. Farquhar and Frank F. Crandell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of John P. Farquhar and Frank F. Crandell, 305 F.2d 887, 49 C.C.P.A. 1318 (ccpa 1962).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

Claims 35 and 37 of appellants’ application Ser. No. 443,892, filed July 16, 1954 entitled “Corrector for Image-Forming Optical Assemblies” were rejected by the examiner as “unpatentable” •over the prior art. The rejection, affirmed by the Board of Appeals, was based upon a U. S. patent to Weidert, No. 1,545,869, issued July 14, 1925. It was the examiner’s position that the two rejected claims were structurally met by Weidert and also that the invention defined in the claims would be obvious in view of the reference cited.

The single issue here is whether the appealed claims were properly rejected as unpatentable over the Weidert reference. For the reasons hereinafter more fully stated, we agree with the examiner and the board that the claims on appeal are obvious in view of Weidert.

Appellants’ invention, while not limited to cameras, can most easily be understood if it is visualized in connection with a simple camera consisting of a lens, an image area where the light sensitive film is exposed, and an aperture selectively opened and closed by a shutter.

If an object to be photographed is visualized as consisting of an infinite number of points, each point emits or reflects light rays (a pencil of rays) in all directions. Light rays travel in straight lines and the pencil of rays from any object point strikes the lens over its entire surface. In a theoretically perfect, aberration-free lens system, the pencil of rays from each object point is refracted by the lens to converge at a point on the image area or film surface.

However, as pointed out in appellants’ brief, due to aberrations or imperfect refraction of the light rays by the lens, the rays do not meet at a point on the image area but converge to form a distorted pattern on the image area. Such aberrations reduce the focusing or resolution power of the lens by impairing the sharpness or clarity of the resultant image. While the lens designer is concerned with several types of aberrations, e. g., comatic, astigmatic, spherical and chromatic aberration, appellants’ invention is directed to minimizing only cc. matic 1 and astigmatic 2 aberrations.

*888 In a given lens system, the amount of comatie-astigmatie aberration for a pencil of rays from an object point increases as the distance of the object point from the optical axis increases. Thus, rays from an object point on the optical axis are more perfectly refracted to form a sharper image or smaller circle on the image area than are the rays from an object point farther from the optical axis.

The actual pattern of an off-axis object point on the image area as disclosed by appellants in their specification looks somewhat like a comet with a tail behind it with the distortion of the object point increasing as its distance from the optical axis is increased.

A circle drawn around the pattern formed on the image area is called the circle of confusion and furnishes a guide for the lens designer. Thus, in designing a lens system for a particular application, the designer picks an arbitrary value for the allowable circle of confusion, below which value the distortion or aberration is acceptable for the particular application. If this value is Kc, 3 then an image pattern of such a point furthest removed from the optical axis may have a circle of confusion larger than K0 which is unacceptable and must be corrected, while image patterns close to the optical axis have a circle of confusion smaller than Kc and are thus acceptable. The line separating the areas of acceptable and non-acceptable image patterns is described in appellants’ specification as the “juncture between the central and the peripheral zones.”

As stated in the specification:

“The present invention improves images subjected to comatic and astigmatic aberration by the use of an optical mask to intercept only those light rays which form the tails of the smeared images thus improving the definition and sharpness of the composite image. Depending upon the type of aberrations involved, an optical mask is positioned around the optical axis adjacent the aperture of the optical system, either in front of the aperture or behind it, and in some cases in both positions.”

Appellants’ mask is so placed relative to the lens that it blocks out the light rays which form an image pattern larger than K0 and passes only the rays which form an image pattern which lies within the limits of the acceptable circle of confusion, Ke. Appellants assert that proper positioning of the mask with respect to the lens is critical since only the unwanted light rays which create the image outside of the acceptable circle of confusion are to be blocked and that it is desirable to pass the greatest possible number of light rays which will create images inside of the acceptable circle of confusion, (K0). Otherwise, as appellants point out, the total light energy is too greatly diminished and in a photographic camera, for instance, the light sensitive film would be underexposed at its outer edges.

Appealed claim 35 defines appellants’ invention as follows:

“35. In an optical system, the combination comprising an image forming optical assembly having an optical axis, an image area of fixed boundaries and an object area, and an aperture, the optical assembly being subject to extra-axial aberra *889 tions which result in point sources of light in the object area from which a pencil of rays filling the aperture are directed being focused in a circle of confusion in the image area, the circle of confusion being discernably greater in a peripheral zone of the image area than in a central zone, the juncture between the central zone and peripheral zone being defined as the locus of the point source images in the image area having a maximum acceptable circle of confusion, and an optical mask having an opening through which passes the optical axis, the edge of the opening in the optical mask being located in any selected axial plane at the intersection of two light rays lying in the selected plane, the first of the two rays being defined as the ray from a point source in the object area whose principal ray impinges on the juncture between the central and peripheral zones in the image area, the first ray passing through the aperture at the edge thereof on the same side of the optical axis as the image of said point source, and the second of the two rays being defined as the ray from a point source in the object area whose principal ray impinges on said fixed boundary of the image area, the second ray impinging on the image area just within an acceptable circle of confusion around the impinging point of the principal ray and passing through the aperture on the same side of the optical axis as the image of said point source, the principal ray being the light ray from any point source that intersects the optical axis at the center of the aperture.”

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Bluebook (online)
305 F.2d 887, 49 C.C.P.A. 1318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-john-p-farquhar-and-frank-f-crandell-ccpa-1962.