OK, there shouldn't be too many more postings here, for awhile. I think I got most of my initial (electronics) design roughed out, and most of the remaining work can be done by me. Thanks for all your help.
Unfortunately, it will NEVER function as I had hoped it would. Maybe it will. But I think not. The off-the-shelf imagers have a cover glass over each one, and might stymie my efforts to interface with a customized lens.
For now, I should go and try to build/design the customized lens, anyway (sort of abandoned my efforts to do so, back in 2008, and again in 2011. Not for lack of success, but for lack of a curved imager to "co-design" it with).
I consider the above schematic to be enough of a "proof of concept" that I can try to solve other problems associated with anthropomorphic cameras. Of course, I will still build it, I just won't obsess about prooving it or obsess about back-of-the-envelope calculations and such!
So, one more post; Lately some folks have been doing the research I want to do. Earliest curved imagers I am aware of are from Burke's 1991 study of focal plane arrays. I just downloaded his entire bibliography from that paper, to see if there is "prior art". The patent literature I have looked at suggest, no. Earliest curved imager patent, that I know of, is from early 2000s, an Agilent patent application that appears to still be pending? Sort of funny, since late 2000s and early 2010s sees a bunch of patents popping up on the subject, from all the big players, google, nikon, apple, etc. Maybe the japanese patents got the ball rolling here in the US? Maybe it was patent trolls, and maybe it was fast tracked in the US office, in order to compete globally? Why "the shaft" for the agilent patent? Maybe agilent didn't care, or forgot? I dunno. I shouldn't spectulate.
Here is the list of relevant study items (omitting patents; That list is in disarray, right now! Maybe an organized one will follow soon, but it is not a priority of mine to compile such a list).
1. "The optical advantages of curved focal plane arrays", Rim, Catrysse, Dinyari, Huang and Peumans* ; Stanford ; 31 March 2008 / Vol. 16, No. 7 / OPTICS EXPRESS 4965
2.Panoramic monocentric imaging using fiber-coupled focal planes", Stamenov, Arianpour, Olivas, Agurok, Johnson, Stack, Morrison, Ford; University of California San Diego, Distant Focus Corporation (Champaign, IL); 29 Dec 2014 | Vol. 22, No. 26 | DOI:10.1364/OE.22.031708 | OPTICS EXPRESS 31708
3. "Flexible focal plane arrays for UVOIR wide field instrumentation" Hugot, Jahn, Chambion, Moulin, Nikitushkina, Gaschet, Henry, Getin, Ferrari, Gaeremynck; Aix Marseille Université, Univ. Grenoble Alpes ; 2016, SPIE proceeding on Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation
4.Development and application of spherically curved charge-coupled device imagers; Gregory, Smith, Pearce, Lambour, Shah, Clark, Warner, Osgood III, Woods, DeCew, Forman, Mendenhall, DeFranzo, Dolat, Loomis; MIT/Lincoln Laboratory, US Army Natick Soldier Research, Development, and Eng. ; pgs. 3072-??? ; APPLIED OPTICS / Vol. 54, No. 10 / 1 April 2015
5. "Optimization of two-glass monocentric lenses for compact panoramic imagers: general aberration analysis and specific designs" Stamenov, Agurok, and Ford; University of California San Diego ; pgs. 7648-??? ; APPLIED OPTICS / Vol. 51, No. 31 / 1 November 2012
6. "Optical analysis of miniature lenses with curved imaging surfaces" RESHIDKO AND SASIAN; The University of Arizona; Vol. 54, No. 28 / October 1 2015 / Applied Optics
7. "Highly curved image sensors: a practical approach for improved optical performance" ; GUENTER, JOSHI, STOAKLEY, KEEFE, GEARY, FREEMAN, HUNDLEY, PATTERSON, HAMMON, HERRERA, SHERMAN, NOWAK, SCHUBERT, BREWER, YANG, MOTT, MCKNIGHT2; Microsoft Corporation, HRL Laboratories ; Vol. 25, No. 12 | 12 Jun 2017 | OPTICS EXPRESS 13010
8. "Design and fabrication of silicon-tessellated structures for monocentric imagers" ; Wu, Hamann, Ceballos, Chang, Solgaard and Howe ; Microsystems & Nanoengineering (2016) 2, 16019; Stanford
9."Tunable curvature of large visible CMOS image sensors: Towards new optical functions and system miniaturization" ; B.Chambion, L.Nikitushkina, Y.Gaeremynck, W.Jahn, E.Hugot, G.Moulin, S.Getin, A.Vandeneynde, D.Henry ; Univ. Grenoble Alpes; Aix Marseilles Universitie ; Conference Paper · May 2016
These and (maybe four more?) are the best I can find, so far. I have not read them all yet. I have collected some more that I have not even worked into the list yet. Coming soon? Maybe revise the list later? I dunno. No time, as usual.
1. Iwert,O., Ouellette,D., Lesser,M., Delabre,B., First results from a novel curving process for large area scientific imagers, SPIE 8453-68, 2012 2. Swain,P., Channin,D., Taylor,G., Lipp,S., Mark,D., Curved CCD’s and Their Application with Astronomical Telescopes and Stereo Panoramic Cameras, Optical and Infrared Detectors for Astronomy, Proc. of SPIE Vol. 5499, SPIE, Bellingham, WA, 2004 3. Dinyari,R., Rim,S.B., Huang,K., Catrysse,P.B., and Peumans,P.,Curving monolithic silicon for nonplanar focal plane array applications, Appl. Phys. Lett. 92, 091114, 2008 4. Woods,D.F., Shah,R.Y., Johnson,J.A., Szabo,A., Pearce,E.C., Lambour,R.L., Faccenda,W.J., Space Surveillance Telescope: focus and alignment of a three mirror telescope, Opt. Eng. 52 (5), 053604, May 07, 2013
And, of course, that patent by William? Hicks, back in the 1960s, for a "fiber optic field flattener", while working for American Optical Company (CIA? Maybe. Gov't contract; see Jeff Hecht's book "City of Lights" for details... )
And, of course, on the subject of field flatteners, one might consult Rudolf Kingslake's "History fo the Photographic Lens" or Petzval's biography (if you know czech, hungarian, or german?).
Cheers, All!
P.S. Also, on ethe subject of log polar imagers, I point to the Jan Van der Spiegel and Sandini et. al., 1989 publication within (editor) carver mead's "Analog VLSI; Neural Networks" book. Also, I point to Travers work summarizing research on the subject. ( Traver and Bernardino ; Rob. and Aut. Syst.. 58 (2010); 378-398 )
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