SKY_September2014.pdf

(Axel Boer) #1
36 September 2014 sky & telescope

Clear Eyes

the new lens showed a huge diff raction spike around
every streetlight and porch lamp. She saw more of the
same when she looked through a telescope. Planets
became bright bands stretching all the way across the
fi eld of view, as did any fi rst- or second-magnitude star.

Ironing Out the Wrinkles
What had gone wrong? It turns out that the little wires
called haptics that hold the lens in place were stretching
the back of the lens capsule and, like cling wrap stretched
unevenly over a bowl, the capsule had wrinkled. The
wrinkle produced a diff raction spike far greater than the
one caused by the spider in front of a telescope.
Kathy’s surgeon wouldn’t believe that the wrinkle was
causing the diff raction spike. The wrinkle is so common
that it’s called the “in the bag sign,” an indicator that the
lens is resting properly within the lens capsule, yet few
people complain about it. Many simply give up low-light
activities. Incredibly, most people just don’t seem to care.
But amateur astronomers care.
Kathy sought out another surgeon for the other eye,
and he had good news. He would insert a ring to hold the
lens capsule tight so the haptics wouldn’t stretch it enough
to wrinkle. It was a great idea, except for one problem: the
ring didn’t work. That’s how common the wrinkle is: even
eff orts to prevent it aren’t always eff ective. Now Kathy had
two diff raction spikes coming off every bright light. Like
the fi rst one, the second spike was mostly horizontal, but
cocked at a jaunty angle from the other, so she now had
two wide bands coming off every bright light.
Sometimes the wrinkles go away with time as the
capsules shrink around the replacement lenses, but
Kathy’s wrinkles stayed put. And to add insult to injury,
she developed secondary cataracts, a common complica-
tion where leftover lens cells grow on the back of the
lens capsule. Fortunately, the fi x doesn’t involve another
invasive surgery. In a quick and painless procedure called
a capsulotomy, the doctor uses a laser to remove the hazy
section, essentially burning an opening in the back of the
lens capsule.
But this procedure provides another opportunity for
amateur astronomers to use expressive four-letter words.
More diff raction! Surgeons don’t like to cut big holes in
people’s eyes. That’s generally a good thing, but with a
capsulotomy, a small hole can mean a ragged edge in the
light path. Even if the edge is relatively smooth, it’s often
polygonal, which can produce diff raction spikes going
every which way.
Fortunately, our optometrist recommended a rela-
tively new surgeon for the capsulotomies, one who was
current on the latest technology and methods. During
the pre-operative interview, we impressed upon him the
severity of the problems Kathy was having with diff rac-
tion and her special concerns as an amateur astronomer.
He understood her concerns and promised to make the

A healthy eye’s view of Saturn through a telescope.

Kathy’s cataracts blurred and broke up the image.

After her fi rst procedure, Kathy’s daytime vision cleared signifi cantly,
but a large diff raction spike destroyed her nighttime vision. After
both eyes had been operated on, a second diff raction spike (not
shown), cocked at a jaunty angle, joined the fi rst.

WRINKLE The
haptics that hold
the replacement
lens in place stretch
the lens capsule and
can create a wrinkle.
This common eff ect
can create diff rac-
tion spikes in the
line of sight.

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Capsulorhexis

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Cataract layout.indd 36 6/23/14 12:17 PM

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