Although distortion can be irregular or follow many patterns, the most commonly encountered distortions are radially symmetric, or approximately so, arising from the symmetry of a
photographic lens. These
radial distortions can usually be classified as either
barrel distortions or
pincushion distortions. Mathematically, barrel and pincushion distortion are
quadratic, meaning they increase as the
square of distance from the center. In mustache distortion the
quartic (degree 4) term is significant: in the center, the degree 2 barrel distortion is dominant, while at the edge the degree 4 distortion in the pincushion direction dominates. Other distortions are in principle possible – pincushion in center and barrel at the edge, or higher order distortions (degree 6, degree 8) – but do not generally occur in practical lenses, and higher order distortions are small relative to the main barrel and pincushion effects.
Origin of terms The names for these distortions come from familiar objects which are visually similar. File:Barrel (PSF).png|In barrel distortion, straight lines bulge
outwards at the center, as in a
barrel. File:Cushion.jpg|In pincushion distortion, corners of squares form elongated points, as in a
cushion. File:Handlebar-moustache.svg|In mustache distortion, horizontal lines bulge up in the center, then bend the other way as they approach the edge of the frame (if in the top of the frame), as in curly
handlebar mustaches.
Occurrence In photography, distortion is particularly associated with
zoom lenses, particularly large-range zooms, but may also be found in prime lenses, and depends on focal distance – for example, the
Canon EF 50mm 1.4 exhibits barrel distortion at extremely short focal distances. Barrel distortion may be found in wide-angle lenses, and is often seen at the wide-angle end of zoom lenses, while pincushion distortion is often seen in older or low-end
telephoto lenses. Mustache distortion is observed particularly on the wide end of zooms, with certain
retrofocus lenses, and more recently on large-range zooms such as the
Nikon 18–200 mm. A certain amount of pincushion distortion is often found with visual optical instruments, e.g.,
binoculars, where it serves to counteract the
globe effect. In order to understand these distortions, it should be remembered that these are
radial defects; the optical systems in question have
rotational symmetry (omitting non-radial defects), so the
didactically correct test image would be a set of
concentric circles having even separation – like a shooter's target. It will then be observed that these common distortions actually imply a nonlinear radius mapping from the object to the image: What is seemingly pincushion distortion, is actually simply an exaggerated radius mapping for large radii in comparison with small radii. A graph showing radius transformations (from object to image) will be steeper in the upper (rightmost) end. Conversely, barrel distortion is actually a diminished radius mapping for large radii in comparison with small radii. A graph showing radius transformations (from object to image) will be less steep in the upper (rightmost) end.
Chromatic aberration Radial distortion that depends on wavelength is called "
lateral chromatic aberration" – "lateral" because radial, "chromatic" because dependent on color (wavelength). This can cause colored fringes in high-contrast areas in the outer parts of the image. This should not be confused with
axial (longitudinal) chromatic aberration, which causes aberrations throughout the field, particularly
purple fringing. ==Software correction==