<H3>Chapter 1: Introduction <H3>Chapter 2: Automatic Lens Design: Managing the Lens Design Program<H3>Chapter 3: Improving a Design<H3>Chapter 4: Evaluation: How Good Is This Design?<H3>Chapter 5: Lens Design Data<H3>Chapter 6: Telescope Objectives<H3>Chapter 7: Eyepieces and Magnifiers<H3>Chapter 8: Cooke Triplet Anastigmats<H3>Chapter 9: Split Triplets<H3>Chapter 10: The Tessar, Hellar, and Other Compounded Triplets<H3>Chapter 11: Double-Meniscus Anastigmats<H3>Chapter 12: The Biotar or Double-Gauss Lens<H3>Chapter 13: Telephoto Lenses<H3>Chapter 14: Reversed Telephoto (Retrofocus and Fish-Eye) Lenses<H3>Chapter 15: Wide-Angle Lenses With Negative Outer Elements<H3>Chapter 16: The Petzval Lens: Head-up Display Lenses<H3>Chapter 17: Microscope Objectives<H3>Chapter 18: Mirror and Catadioptric Systems<H3>Chapter 19: Infrared and Ultraviolet Systems<H3>Chapter 20: Zoom Lenses<H3>Chapter 21: Projection TV Lenses and Macro Lenses<H3>Chapter 22: Scanner/f-o, Laser Disk and Collimator Lenses<H3>Chapter 23: Tolerance Budgeting<H3>Chapter 24: Formulary<H4>GLOSSARY<H4>REFERENCES<H4>INDEX