A simple lens produces a very imperfect image, which is usually blurred away from the centre. The image may have colour fringes around object outlines, and straight lines may be distorted. Such defects, called aberrations, can be eliminated—and even then not completely—only by replacing the single lens element by a group of elements of appropriate shape and separation. Aberrations arising from some of the lens elements then counteract opposite aberrations produced by other elements. The larger the maximum aperture, the greater the angle of coverage, and the higher the degree of correction aimed at, the more complex camera lenses become. ...(100 of 19384 words)