外部链接:    leo英德   dict有道 百度搜索百度 google谷歌 google图片 wiki维基 百度百科百科   

 lens [lenz]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 透镜, 镜头, 镜片, 晶状体

vt. 给...摄影

[化] 透镜

[医] 晶状体, 透镜, 镜片




    lens
    [ noun ]
    1. a transparent optical device used to converge or diverge transmitted light and to form images

    2. <noun.artifact>
    3. genus of small erect or climbing herbs with pinnate leaves and small inconspicuous white flowers and small flattened pods: lentils

    4. <noun.plant>
    5. (metaphor) a channel through which something can be seen or understood

    6. <noun.communication>
      the writer is the lens through which history can be seen
    7. biconvex transparent body situated behind the iris in the eye; its role (along with the cornea) is to focuses light on the retina

    8. <noun.body>
    9. electronic equipment that uses a magnetic or electric field in order to focus a beam of electrons

    10. <noun.artifact>


    Lens \Lens\ (l[e^]nz), n.; pl. {Lenses} (-[e^]z). [L. lens a
    lentil. So named from the resemblance in shape of a double
    convex lens to the seed of a lentil. Cf. {Lentil}.] (Opt.)
    A piece of glass, or other transparent substance, ground with
    two opposite regular surfaces, either both curved, or one
    curved and the other plane, and commonly used, either singly
    or combined, in optical instruments, for changing the
    direction of rays of light, and thus magnifying objects, or
    otherwise modifying vision. In practice, the curved surfaces
    are usually spherical, though rarely cylindrical, or of some
    other figure.
    Lenses

    Note: Of spherical lenses, there are six varieties, as shown
    in section in the figures herewith given: viz., a
    plano-concave; b double-concave; c plano-convex; d
    double-convex; e converging concavo-convex, or
    converging meniscus; f diverging concavo-convex, or
    diverging meniscus.

    {Crossed lens} (Opt.), a double-convex lens with one radius
    equal to six times the other.

    {Crystalline lens}. (Anat.) See {Eye}.

    {Fresnel lens} (Opt.), a compound lens formed by placing
    around a central convex lens rings of glass so curved as
    to have the same focus; used, especially in lighthouses,
    for concentrating light in a particular direction; -- so
    called from the inventor.

    {Multiplying lens} or {Multiplying glass} (Opt.), a lens one
    side of which is plane and the other convex, but made up
    of a number of plane faces inclined to one another, each
    of which presents a separate image of the object viewed
    through it, so that the object is, as it were, multiplied.


    {Polyzonal lens}. See {Polyzonal}.

    1. The other common types of lens wearer for which companies cater are myopes, who can see well at short distances but poorly from afar, and hyperopes, with the opposite problem.
    2. The company said it sold more than $50 million of sunglasses, eyeglasses and related lens products in 1989, compared with with $55 million in 1983.
    3. In those prototypes, instead of headlights, a 3-inch-wide lens runs across the front of the car and projects both high and low beams channeled from a "light engine" under the hood.
    4. Then she poses with her children as her wheelchair-bound husband looks the other way. As I steady my lens, her sister sneaks up beside me.
    5. When the lens is switched from wide-angle to tele, the flash angle is changed accordingly and the distance of the flash reflector from the optical axis is altered to reduce the possibility of red-eye.
    6. Cooper, a maker of diagnostic, ophthalmic and surgical products, said the sale includes about 120 retail stores in the U.K. but excludes its world-wide contact lens or lens care businesses.
    7. Cooper, a maker of diagnostic, ophthalmic and surgical products, said the sale includes about 120 retail stores in the U.K. but excludes its world-wide contact lens or lens care businesses.
    8. The Allergan Advents are expected to compete directly with disposable lenses, such as the AcuVue lens made by a division of Johnson & Johnson.
    9. This year, some 1.3 million Americans are expected to have cataract surgery, in which an artificial lens is placed in the eye.
    10. Disposable lens wearers would spend far less than that amount on solutions because they wouldn't be required to use a disinfectant.
    11. It consists of a small plastic disk, slightly thicker than a camera lens cap, that is filled with an absorbent material.
    12. A Kidder Peabody analyst repeated her "strong buy" rating on the stock, arguing that prospects are good for the company's specialty contact lens business and citing strong sales gains so far this year in its sunglasses business.
    13. These tests, on patients who volunteered, showed that the special laser could hone away microscopic layers of the cornea to reshape the lens and do so without producing any scarring or clouding of the lens.
    14. These tests, on patients who volunteered, showed that the special laser could hone away microscopic layers of the cornea to reshape the lens and do so without producing any scarring or clouding of the lens.
    15. Government scientists in Kearneysville, W.Va., are experimenting with a video camera to examine Red Delicious apples through a lens filter.
    16. Did he fail adequately to distinguish his own lens from that of its archetype and that of Jack Boozer who preceded him? Unfortunately, it would seem so.
    17. The company introduced two throw-away 35mm cameras Tuesday, one that can be used underwater and another that has a special wide-angle lens to better capture panoramic views and group shots.
    18. Thus, the new lens can reduce the size and weight of binoculars and "zoom" attachments, giving hand-held movie, video and still cameras the same zoom capability achieved by conventional attachments that are now used mainly on tripod-mounted cameras.
    19. The future photographer Lee Miller's father posed her naked when she returned home on a visit at age 21. Now we see this picture in books about Ms. Miller and get a prurient kick out of knowing who was on the other side of the lens.
    20. Most glass lenses refract light by only a single angle determined by the curvature of the lens.
    21. Trading in the early weeks of the second half, however, remained 'difficult and uncertain'. Sales of contact lens solutions had come under pressure following the Monopolies and Mergers Commission's decision to widen the availability of such products.
    22. SAE writes standards on such things as what grade of motor oil works best in cold temperatures, how much reflection comes from a taillight lens, the process that makes a brake stop a car.
    23. A galaxy relatively close to Earth acts as a sort of lens, bending the light emitted by a more distant object.
    24. It will include a special close-up lens allowing picture-taking at a distance of 10 inches, Polaroid said.
    25. The company introduced two throw-away 35mm cameras Tuesday, one that can be used underwater and another that has a special wide-angle lens to better capture panoramic views and group shots. The cameras cost under $15 each.
    26. Later this week, a command radioed from Earth will open the lens cap on the Hubble Space Telescope and allow the first light from space to strike its mirror.
    27. "You significantly increase the risk of complications when you wear any contact lens overnight, and the more nights you wear it in a row, the greater the risk," said Dr. Ronald E. Smith of the University of Southern California.
    28. "I sat in my van and used a telescopic lens to get pictures of him coming out of a pub and driving away," Proctor said.
    29. After the lens trials, the monkeys are killed so researchers can examine their brains and the development of their optical nerve systems, Boothe said.
    30. Both companies are taking their cues from Japan, where Mr. King says that cardboard cameras, called "film with lens," accounted for more than 30% of Fuji's film sales last year.
    加入收藏 本地收藏 百度搜藏 QQ书签 美味书签 Google书签 Mister Wong
    您正在访问的是
    中国词汇量第二的英语词典
    更多精彩,登录后发现......
    验证码看不清,请点击刷新
      注册