Material: Fused Silica
Dimension: 0.45-300mm
Dimensional tol: ±0.1mm
Angle tol: less than 3 min
Flatness: L/2 - L/10
S/D: 60/40 - 40/20
Chamfer: Protective Chamfer
Bevel: Protective bevel as needed
Coating type: Uncoated, AR,HR or metallic
Roof prism is a type of optical prism commonly used in binoculars, microscopes, and other optical instruments to adjust the direction of the light path and maintain image consistency from side to side by reflecting and refracting light rays.
Basic structure and principles of roof prisms
Roof surface: one of the reflective surfaces of a prism is designed as a “roof” (similar to the angle of two sloping surfaces of a roof, usually 90°), and these two sloping surfaces flip the direction of the light through secondary reflections, thus correcting for left-right inversion of the image.
Optical path adjustment: after many times of total reflection inside the prism, the light ray outgoing direction is parallel to the incoming direction, but the optical path is collapsed, which shortens the length of the instrument.
Phase correction: high-end roof prisms are coated with a phase coating to solve the problem of optical range difference caused by beam splitting on the roof surface, and to improve imaging contrast and resolution.