Originally Posted by
Abitconfused
Now the technical stuff. Light reflected from a lens is in the form of a wave, for our purposes, an undesirable wave. Because reflection is a wave, engineers can create an “anti-wave” to eliminate the reflection. They must create a reflected wave of opposite phase (up when the other wave is down). The anti-wave must have an equal frequency, an identical magnitude, and travel in the same direction as the undesirable reflected wave. The thickness of a lens coating must be exactly 1/4 of the wavelength of light for creation of an out of phase wave. When the reflected light wave from the surface of the lens meets the reflected light wave from the surface of the lens coating, 1/4 wavelength distant, they are 1/2 wavelength out of phase. They are 1/2 out of phase because some of the incoming light, having traveled through the 1/4 wavelength thick coating, is reflected back through the 1/4 wavelength coating and 1/4 + 1/4 is 1/2. The difference between the trough and crest of the reflected waves is one-half wavelength and they are traveling in the same direction. Collision is unavoidable and annihilation results. This “destructive interference,” cancels out both reflected waves. So-called “quarter wave coatings” are very effective. Reflections are gone. Eliminated. Almost none, anyway, 99.9% gone. Multi-layered lens coatings of different thicknesses on a quality lens eliminate reflection throughout all wavelengths of the visual spectrum. It works very, very well.