Freakscene
Obscure member
that looks a bit like cavity resonance to me a la Fabry-Perot, like a surface pair is locally close to plane parallel. If so that might be unavoidable with the geometry in question. (I say this in part because the image looks near-monochromatic: does it still do it with white, with no colour fringing "in the onion rings"?).
It is not due to the geometry of the lens. They are the result of marks on the aspherical element from the manufacturing process. They still appear in monochrome.
If you mean the method of "machining" aspheric surfaces with a diamond stylus and then not smoothing the grooves, I guess this is one way to avoid too much cost increase: if you look at optic catalogues and the same-size, same-glass, same-EFL, same-surface tolerance precision asphere is 2-5x the price of the corresponding spherical item that input cost has to either be passed on to the consumer or reduced somehow. I guess it boils down to microfacets left on glass or moulded plastic (at least index matched caps) or less money spent elsewhere (or price hike).
Most camera aspherical lens elements are manufactured by pressing hot liquid glass against a mould. The mould is a machined metal template with a curvature in the negative of the lens surface. The concentric patterns are traces of the turning process with which the moulds are manufactured. There are ways to both polish the mould and the elements to avoid this, but manufacturers typically don't employ them. The $US8k Leica 50mm Summicron ASPH APO has these concentric rings in the bokeh, and at that price point I'd have thought they would polish the mould better.
Marty