There are few commercial activities founded more completely upon physics than is the optical industry, but this foundation is very old, and the consequences are not altogether good. The foundation began perhaps with Huygens and Newton, followed with Young, Fresnel. and Fraunhofer, with a special debt to Maxwell. Helmholtz provided knowledge of the optics of the eye upon which the modern spectacle industry may be said to be built, but it was not until Ernst Abbe that a physicist really got busy and did something directly for the optical industry. Before his death in 1905 Abbe had developed an optical industry centering at Jena which was founded upon excellent and sophisticated physics of the period, and which for a long time dominated optics in the rest of the world. In fact so much good scientific material related to optics was assembled that the whole optical industry coasted, in a sense, for more than a quarter of a century, using up the research of the past.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
January 1960
January 01 1960
Physics in the optical industry
Brian O'Brien
Brian O'Brien
NAS-NRC Division of Physical Sciences
Search for other works by this author on:
Physics Today 13 (1), 52–57 (1960);
Citation
Brian O'Brien; Physics in the optical industry. Physics Today 1 January 1960; 13 (1): 52–57. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3056790
Download citation file:
PERSONAL SUBSCRIPTION
Purchase an annual subscription for $25. A subscription grants you access to all of Physics Today's current and backfile content.
Sign In
You could not be signed in. Please check your credentials and make sure you have an active account and try again.
Citing articles via
France’s Oppenheimer
William Sweet
Making qubits from magnetic molecules
Stephen Hill
Learning to see gravitational lenses
Sebastian Fernandez-Mulligan