A lens (from the Latin lens, lentis = lentil) is an optical device made of transparent material—usually glass—bounded by two spherical surfaces or by one spherical surface and one plane surface. If the lens displays a concave side and a convex side, it is more accurately known as a meniscus. Lenses (and menisci) can be converging, i.e., with positive optic power, or diverging, i.e., with negative optic power. Converging lenses, as their name indicates, cause light rays from a source located at infinity to converge toward a point known as the focal point (from the Latin focus, foci = fireplace: the term derives from the fact that, by concentrating the sun's rays on bits of straw or paper, these ignite). When an object is placed between the focus and a converging lens, the viewing angle is widened, and the object appears upright and enlarged. Ordinary magnification glasses are, in fact, converging lenses. In diverging lenses, instead, the light rays from a source located at infinity are deviated in such a way that it is their extensions that converge on a point: the latter is known as a virtual focus. An object placed between a diverging lens and its focus appears upright and reduced. To put it simply, the distance between the center of a lens and its focus is called focal distance (or focal length). It is determined by the curvature radii of the lens and by the refraction index of the material from which the lens is made. Lens power is expressed in diopters (D), which are defined by the inverse of the focal distance expressed in meters: for example, a lens with a focal length of 50 cm has a power of 2 D (= 1 / 0.5 m) if the lens is converging, or -2 D if the lens is diverging. The various combinations of surfaces—plane, concave or convex—generate the different types of lenses.