What is chromatic aberration
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Last updated: April 1, 2026
Key Facts
- Occurs because different wavelengths of light have different refractive indices in glass—a property called dispersion
- Present in both cameras and the human eye, though the eye's lens design naturally minimizes its visibility
- Can be corrected through apodization, multi-element lens designs, or post-processing digital correction in photography software
- More pronounced in wide-angle lenses, telephoto lenses, and lower-quality optical elements
- Two primary types: longitudinal (axial) aberration along the optical axis and transverse (lateral) aberration perpendicular to it
Understanding Chromatic Aberration
Chromatic aberration is a lens defect that separates white light into its component colors as it passes through optical glass. When light enters a lens, it bends (refracts), but different wavelengths bend at slightly different angles. Red light (longer wavelengths) refracts less than blue light (shorter wavelengths). This difference causes each color to focus at a slightly different point, resulting in color fringing or blurring.
How It Occurs
The root cause is dispersion—the property of a medium where the refractive index varies with wavelength. In camera lenses and telescopes, when light passes through the glass elements, colors separate slightly. This is inevitable in any single-element lens. The effect becomes particularly visible at image edges where light enters at sharper angles, and in high-contrast areas between light and dark regions.
Types of Chromatic Aberration
Longitudinal (Axial) Aberration occurs along the optical axis, where different colors focus at different distances from the lens. Transverse (Lateral) Aberration appears perpendicular to the optical axis, where colors are displaced laterally. Lateral aberration typically appears as red/green or blue/magenta fringes at edges, while axial aberration causes soft focus or color haloing effects.
Impact on Photography and Vision
In photography, chromatic aberration appears as colored fringes along high-contrast edges—typically red on one side and cyan/blue on the other. This is most noticeable in wide-angle lenses, telephoto lenses, and budget optical equipment. In the human eye, chromatic aberration exists but is nearly imperceptible due to the eye's spherical design and how the brain processes images.
Correction Methods
Modern optical designers use several approaches to minimize chromatic aberration. Multi-element lens designs with specially formulated glasses help correct color separation. Apodization uses aperture devices to block off-axis light rays. Digital correction in modern cameras and editing software can automatically compensate for known aberrations based on lens profiles. High-quality lenses with exceptional glass formulations keep chromatic aberration nearly invisible.
Related Questions
What is spherical aberration?
Spherical aberration is a lens defect where light rays at the edge of a lens focus at a different point than rays near the center, creating blurring. It differs from chromatic aberration in that it affects all wavelengths equally.
Can chromatic aberration be corrected in post-processing?
Yes, modern photo editing software like Lightroom, Photoshop, and Capture One can correct chromatic aberration using lens profiles or manual adjustment of red and blue channels.
Why do expensive lenses have less chromatic aberration?
Premium lenses use multiple optical elements made from specially formulated glass with optimized refractive properties, advanced coatings, and precise manufacturing tolerances to minimize color separation.
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Sources
- Wikipedia - Chromatic AberrationCC-BY-SA-4.0
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