Paper
13 October 2005 A ferrofluidic deformable mirror for ophthalmology
J. B. Macpherson, S. Thibault, E. F. Borra, A. M. Ritcey, N. Carufel, D. Asselin, H. Jerominek, M. C. W. Campbell
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Optical aberrations reduce the imaging quality of the human eye. In addition to degrading vision, this limits our ability to illuminate small points of the retina for therapeutic, surgical or diagnostic purposes. When viewing the rear of the eye, aberrations cause structures in the fundus to appear blurred, limiting the resolution of ophthalmoscopes (diagnostic instruments used to image the eye). Adaptive optics, such as deformable mirrors may be used to compensate for aberrations, allowing the eye to work as a diffraction-limited optical element. Unfortunately, this type of correction has not been widely available for ophthalmic applications because of the expense and technical limitations of current deformable mirrors. We present preliminary design and characterisation of a deformable mirror suitable for ophthalmology. In this ferrofluidic mirror, wavefronts are reflected from a fluid whose surface shape is controlled by a magnetic field. Challenges in design are outlined, as are advantages over traditional deformable mirrors.
© (2005) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
J. B. Macpherson, S. Thibault, E. F. Borra, A. M. Ritcey, N. Carufel, D. Asselin, H. Jerominek, and M. C. W. Campbell "A ferrofluidic deformable mirror for ophthalmology", Proc. SPIE 5969, Photonic Applications in Biosensing and Imaging, 59691C (13 October 2005); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.628676
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KEYWORDS
Mirrors

Eye

Deformable mirrors

Actuators

Ophthalmology

Magnetism

Fused deposition modeling

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