Thankyou so much, i appreciate your expertise. This is extremely helpful! So it does have to be a sphere, how interesting, I never would have guessed that. All new territory for me.
So my question is then, is you had a larger diameter sphere, say an inch wide ($$?), can you still get a short back focal length? Does the diameter affect the image or is it just a matter of proper scaling?
Thanks for running your program, super cool to see what the image would look like.
I was looking at
https://www.knightoptical.com/stock...lenses/ball-and-half-ball-lenses/ball-lenses/
The shortest back focal length is 0.05 (im assuming this is as close as you'd get?) mind you the diameter is only 0.6, so its tiny and probably for microscopic purposes I imagine.
The application im thinking of is to actually laser etch an image on the lens itself like a lithophane, its more of a data transmission test im curious about attempting with a mobile phone. So I figured that the lens would at least need to be a bit bigger just to accommodate the etched image itself, because im not entirely sure how small of a unit measurement you can get with laser etching. Its more that im trying to think of a single material solution, otherwise I would go the microphoto route and stick one on the back.
Also, I was looking at:
which is 10x magnification, so if I can get something close to this with the sphere that would be dandy.
As for putting it in a cube, "with a bump for the front optical surface that you are looking through" sounds exactly what I want and what I was thinking. So when you say " except for the actual parts of the surface that the light rays pass through" is there some sort of formula for determining how much of the sphere could pop through the top of the cube?
So itd be a little cube with an image etched on the back basically that you could put up to your phone and retrieve the data.