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cross hair

 
Dictionary: cross hair or cross·hair (krôs'hâr', krŏs'-)
n.
Either of two fine strands of wire crossed in the focus of the eyepiece of an optical instrument and used as a calibration or sighting reference.


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WordNet: cross hair
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: either of two fine mutually perpendicular lines that cross in the focus plane of an optical instrument and are use for sighting or calibration
  Synonym: cross wire


Wikipedia: Reticle
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A comparison of different reticles used in telescopic sights. The lower right represents a reticle found in the scope of a Russian SVD sniper rifle.

A reticle is a shape superimposed on an image that is used for precise alignment of a device, most notably that of a telescopic sight. The word reticule is from the Latin meaning "net", a network or grid of lines displayed in an optical instrument. The minimum reticle consists of simple crossed lines, or crosshairs.

Crosshairs are most commonly represented as intersecting lines in a "+" shape, though many variations exist, including dots, posts, circles, scales, chevrons, or a combination of these. Most commonly associated with telescopic sights for aiming firearms, crosshairs are also common in optical instruments used for astronomy and surveying, and are also popular in graphical user interfaces as a precision pointer. The reticle was invented by Robert Hooke, and dates to the 17th century.

Contents

Use

Firearms

Telescopic sights for firearms, generally just called scopes, are probably the device most often associated with crosshairs. Motion pictures and the media often use a view through crosshairs as a dramatic device, which has given crosshairs wide cultural exposure.

Reticle shape

While the traditional thin crossing lines are the original and still the most familiar cross-hair shape, they are really best suited for precision aiming at high contrast targets, as the thin lines are easily lost in complex backgrounds, such as those encountered while hunting. Thicker bars are much easier to discern against a complex background, but lack the precision of thin bars. The most popular types of cross-hair in modern scopes are variants on the duplex cross-hair, with bars that are thick on the perimeter and thin out in the middle. The thick bars allow the eye to quickly locate the center of the reticle, and the thin lines in the center allow for precision aiming. The thin bars in a duplex reticle may also be designed to be used as a measure. Called a 30/30 reticle, the thin bars on such a reticle span 30 inches at 100 yards when the scope's power is at 4x. This enables an experienced shooter to deduce (as opposed to guess or estimate) the range within an acceptable error limit.

Wire crosshairs

The original crosshairs in fact used hair or spiderweb, as it was thin and strong. Many modern scopes use wire crosshairs, which can be flattened to various degrees to change the width. These wires are usually silver in color, but appear black when backlit by the image passing through the scope's optics. Wire reticles are by nature fairly simple, as they require lines that pass all the way across the reticle, and the shapes are limited to the variations in thickness allowed by flatting the wire; duplex crosshairs, and crosshairs with dots are possible, and multiple horizontal or vertical lines may be used. The advantage of wire crosshairs is that they are fairly tough and durable, and provide no obstruction to light passing through the scope.

Etched reticles

Etched "FinDot" reticle (a regular mil-dot reticle with the addition of 400 m – 1200 m holdover (stadiametric) rangefinding brackets for 1 meter high or 0.5 meter wide targets at 400, 600, 800, 1000 and 1200 m). Reticle illumination is provided by a tritium ampoule embedded in the elevation turret.

The first suggestion for etched glass reticles was made by Philippe de La Hire in 1700.[1] His method was based on engraving the lines on a glass plate with a diamond point. Many modern crosshairs are actually etched onto a thin plate of glass, which allows a far greater latitude in shapes. Etched glass reticles can have floating elements, which do not cross the reticle; circles and dots are common, and some types of glass reticles have complex sections designed for use in range estimation and bullet drop and drift compensation (see external ballistics). The disadvantage of glass reticles is that they are less durable than wire crosshairs, and the surface of the glass reflects some light, lessening transmission through the scope.

Illuminated reticles

Either type of reticle can be illuminated for use in low light. Illumination is usually provided by a battery powered LED, though a radioactive element containing Tritium may be used for autonomous illumination for approximately 11 years without using a battery, via radioactive decay, like in the British SUSAT sight for the SA80 (L85) assault rifle, or the American ACOG (Advanced Combat Optical Gunsight). The light is projected forward through the scope, and reflects off the back surface of the reticle. Red is the most common color used, as it is the least destructive to the shooter's night vision, but some products use green or yellow dots, either as a single colour or changeable via user selection.

Focal plane

The reticle may be located at the front or rear focal plane of the scope. On fixed power scopes there is no significant difference, but on variable power scopes the front plane reticle remains at a constant size compared to the target, while rear plane reticles remain a constant size to the user as the target image grows and shrinks. Front plane reticles are slightly more durable, but most American users prefer that the reticle remain constant as the image changes size, so nearly all modern variable power scopes are rear focal plane designs. European high end optics manufacturers often leave the customer the choice between a front or rear focal plane reticle.

Collimated reticles

Collimated reticles give the viewer an image of the reticle superimposed over the field of view. Collimated reticles are created using refractive or reflective optical collimators to generate a collimated image of an illuminated or reflective reticle. The most common implementations use beam splitters to allow the viewer to see the field of view and a reflection of the projected reticle simultaneously. These devices, often called reflex sights, are used on surveying/triangulating equipment, to aid celestial telescope aiming, and as sights on firearms. Reflex sights such as the Aimpoint_CompM2 are widely fielded by the U.S. Military. Historically they were used on larger military weapon systems where the operator needed a wide field of view to track and range a moving target visually (i.e. weapons from the pre laser/radar/computer era).

Holographic reticles

Bushnell has recently introduced the Holosight, which is a reflex sight that uses a holographic reticle and a laser diode for illumination. The Holosight is able to render a 3-D reticle image. The downside to the Holosight is the cost and weight; it is more expensive and significantly heavier than other reflex sights.

Surveying and astronomy

In older instruments, reticle crosshairs and stadia marks were made using threads taken from the cocoon of the brown recluse spider. This very fine, strong spider silk makes for an excellent crosshair.[2][3]

Surveying

In surveying, reticles are designed for specific uses. Levels and theodolites would have slightly different reticles. However, both may have features such as stadia marks to allow distance measurements.

Astronomy

For astronomical uses, reticles could be simple crosshair designs or more elaborate designs for special purposes. Telescopes used for polar alignment could have a reticle that indicates the position of Polaris relative to the north celestial pole. Telescopes that are used for very precise measurements would have a filar micrometer as a reticle; this could be adjusted by the operator to measure angular distances between stars.

For aiming telescopes, reflex sights are popular, often in conjunction with a small telescope with a crosshair reticle. The reflex sight, such as the Telrad,[4] make aiming the telescope on a Astronomical object or a region of the sky quite easy.

The constellation Reticulum was designated to recognize the reticle and its contributions to astronomy.

References

  1. ^ Maurice Daumas, Scientific Instruments of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries and Their Makers, Portman Books, London 1989 ISBN 978-0713407273
  2. ^ Raymond Davis, Francis Foote, Joe Kelly, Surveying, Theory and Practice, McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1966 LC 64-66263
  3. ^ Berenbaum, May R., Field Notes - Spin Control, The Sciences, The New York Academy Of Sciences, September/October 1995
  4. ^ Telrad information including history of the device.

External links


Translations: Cross-hair
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Dansk (Danish)
adj. - trådkors-

idioms:

  • cross-hair pointer    krydsmarkør; på computere

Français (French)
adj. - réticule, fils en croix, fils d'araignée

idioms:

  • cross-hair pointer    (Comput) curseur en forme de croix

Deutsch (German)
adj. - mit der Form eines Kreuzes, kreuzförmig

idioms:

  • cross-hair pointer    Fadenkreuzzeiger

Ελληνική (Greek)
adj. - σταυρόνημα (διόπτρας κ.λπ.)

idioms:

  • cross-hair pointer    (Η/Υ) δείκτης σταυρόνημα

Español (Spanish)
adj. - en forma de cruz

idioms:

  • cross-hair pointer    puntero en forma de cruz, tipo de puntero en GUI

Svenska (Swedish)
adj. - kors-

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
望远镜等上的十字丝的, 十字标线的

idioms:

  • cross-hair pointer    十字丝, 叉丝点

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
adj. - 望遠鏡等上的十字絲的, 十字標線的

idioms:

  • cross-hair pointer    十字絲, 叉絲點

한국어 (Korean)
adj. - (쌍안경이나 광학 기계의) 가는 십자선

עברית (Hebrew)
adj. - ‮בצורת צלב דק-קווים‬


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Reticle" Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more