An active optical zoom system changes the magnification (or effective focal length)
of an optical imaging system by utilizing two or more active optics in a conventional
optical system. The system can create relatively large changes in system magnification
with very small changes in the focal lengths of individual active elements by leveraging
the optical power of the conventional optical elements (e.g., passive lenses and
mirrors) surrounding the active optics. The active optics serve primarily as variable
focal-length lenses or mirrors, although adding other aberrations enables increased
utility. The active optics can either be LC SLMs, used in a transmissive optical
zoom system, or DMs, used in a reflective optical zoom system. By appropriately
designing the optical system, the variable focal-length lenses or mirrors can provide
the flexibility necessary to change the overall system focal length (i.e., effective
focal length), and therefore magnification, that is normally accomplished with
mechanical motion in conventional zoom lenses. The active optics can provide additional
flexibility by allowing magnification to occur anywhere within the FOV of the system,
not just on-axis as in a conventional system.