Can I use a cylinder mirror as a panorama lens

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I impressed from telescopes.

They have big mirrors and a small mirror at the focus , they are two axis symetrical , i mean verticaly and horizontaly symetric and curved.

What happens if I use a cylinderical mirror which made from curved stainless steel plate as the big mirror .

A there can be film at the focus of the big mirror ?

B or there can be a small cut cylinder stainless pipe as a secondary mirror which focuses the light through a hall at the big mirror on to the film at behind of big mirror.

What kind of image we get from horizontaly curved lens or mirror ?

Can it be computer corrected ?

I asked few experts offline but they said they did not know the answer.

Best ,

Mustafa Umut Sarac
 
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Mustafa Umut Sarac
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For example , you have two female cylinderical lens.

you put them one in front of other.

you started to record to a video or record to a film at bulb mode.

you started to rotate one of the lenses and you cover what a spherical lens would cover !

Am i right ? Does it work ?

Mustafa Umut Sarac
 
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Mustafa Umut Sarac
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Herr , I think I m not understanding. I looked to roundshot and it uses a digital back and lens.
I am rotating the front lens on its axis , i m not trying to take 360 degree photograph but i m trying to not to use spherical lens but two dimensional two lenses.
Is there something i m missing ?

Best ,

Mustafa Umut Sarac
 
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The older Roundshot used 120 or 220 roll film, and had a slit arrangement for exposing the film. Lenses off some 35mm cameras could be used, like a few of the 28mm Nikon manual focus lenses. You could hold the camera in your hand by the grip below it, and when you pressed the shutter release, the camera rotated about axis to exposure a length of film across the slit. Shots were possible in several angular rotations, even 360º (full rotation).

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This link is to the 28-220, which is still available. There is a nice animation image on this page, which shows the camera turning. So what I think on your reflective cylinder idea is that the cylinder substitutes for rotation, though you still need to move the film, or somehow expose it (hard to imagine a shutter for that). Anyway, I use to know a photographer who only shot hotels and resorts, and had one of the older Roundshot cameras, which is why I mentioned it.

Ciao!

Gordon Moat Photography
 
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