[Home]Abbe number

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

The Abbe number, also known as the V-number or constringence of a transparent material is a measure of the material's dispersion (variation of refractive index with wavelength). Named for [Ernst Abbe]? (1840-1905), German physicist.

The Abbe number V of a material is defined as:

V = (nd - 1) / (nF - nC)

where nd, nF and nC are the refractive indicies of the material at the wavelengths of the Fraunhofer d-, F- and C- spectral lines (587.6 nm, 486.1 nm and 656.3 nm respectively). Low dispersion materials have high values of V.

Abbe numbers are used to classify glasses, for example flint glasses have V<50 and crown glasses V >50. Abbe numbers are only a useful measure of dispersion for visible light, and for other wavelengths, or for higher precision work, the group velocity dispersion is used.


HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
This page is read-only | View other revisions
Last edited October 24, 2001 9:34 am by DrBob (diff)
Search: