Measurement of high-frequency speckle vibration amplitude from a blurred image
The non-contact detection of a vibrating surface through the extraction of the vibration of the speckle pattern that the surface produces when illuminated by a coherent source of light has been implemented almost from the invention of the laser and is still an active field of research. In this work,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied optics (2004) 2024-07, Vol.63 (21), p.5706 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The non-contact detection of a vibrating surface through the extraction of the vibration of the speckle pattern that the surface produces when illuminated by a coherent source of light has been implemented almost from the invention of the laser and is still an active field of research. In this work, the vibration amplitude of a speckle pattern is measured using a single blurred image taken with exposure times that are multiples of the vibration period. The method is based on the variation of the cross-correlation function width as a function of the speckle vibration amplitude. There is no analytical expression for that function, so it must be obtained numerically. The oscillating speckle patterns were produced with a piezoelectric transducer excited at vibration frequencies ranging from a few Hz up to tens of kHz. A custom CMOS photodetector sensor with programmable interconnection between pixels was used to verify the speckle pattern vibration amplitude and frequency. |
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ISSN: | 1559-128X 2155-3165 |
DOI: | 10.1364/AO.527541 |