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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. A method of measuring the movement of a predetermined zone of a surface
of a vibrating object, comprising the steps of:
generating a laser beam having a predetermined coherence length;
separating the laser beam into a probe beam and a reference beam;
delaying the reference beam relative to the probe beam by a predetermined
time interval sufficient for the probe beam to travel through a
predetermined distance at least corresponding to the coherence length;
combining the thus delayed reference beam with the probe beam to form a
combination beam;
subdividing the combination beam into a plurality of substantially equal
component beams;
conducting each of the component beams along a separate path to a separate
associated location spaced from the predetermined zone substantially by
one-half of the distance traveled by light in said predetermined time
interval between the respective associated location and the predetermined
zone;
reflecting a predetermined portion of each of the component beams at the
respective associated location back into the respective path;
directing the remainder of each of the component beams from the respective
associated location to the predetermined zone for return from the
predetermined zone at least predominantly back toward the respective
associated location, in the form of a speckle pattern including dark
speckles which may be situated at least at one but not at all of said
associated locations, and into the respective path with attendant coherent
interference of the probe beam part of the thus returned remainder of the
respective component beam with the reference beam part of the
predetermined portion of the respective component beam resulting in a
return light beam modulated in dependence on the movement of the
predetermined zone relative to the respective associated location except
when one of the dark speckles coincides with said associated location; and
concurrently demodulating all of the return light beams to obtain from
those of them that are unaffected by the dark speckles an indication of
the movement of the predetermined zone.
2. The method as defined in claim 1, wherein said conducting step includes
confining each of the component beams in a separate optical fiber.
3. The method as defined in claim 1, wherein said delaying step includes
conducting the probe beam in a path of a predetermined length and the
reference beam in another path having a length exceeding the predetermined
length by the predetermined distance.
4. The method as defined in claim 1, wherein said delaying step includes
confining the probe beam in an optical fiber having a predetermined length
and the reference beam in another optical fiber having a length exceeding
the predetermined length by the predetermined distance.
5. The method as defined in claim 1, and further comprising the step of
delaying at least one of the component beams relative to another prior to
reaching the respective associated locations by a period of time that
exceeds the predetermined time interval and is at least in such a
predetermined ratio thereto that the reflected probe beam part stemming
from one of the component beams reaches a different one of the associated
locations from that associated with the one component beam out of
coherence with the portions of both of the probe and reference beam that
are reflected at the different associated location.
6. The method as defined in claim 5, wherein said predetermined ratio is an
integral multiple of 3.
7. The method as defined in claim 1, and further comprising the step of
recombining the return light beams prior to said demodulating step.
8. The method as defined in claim 1, and further comprising the step of
shifting the frequency of at least one of the reference and probe beams
prior to said combining step by a predetermined carrier frequency relative
to that of the other beam so that the modulation of the return light beam
in dependence on the movement of the predetermined zone is superimposed on
the predetermined carrier frequency.
9. An arrangement for measuring the movement of a predetermined zone of a
surface of a vibrating object, comprising:
means for generating a laser beam having a predetermined coherence length;
means for separating the laser beam into a probe beam and a reference beam;
means for delaying the reference beam relative to the probe beam by a
predetermined time interval sufficient for the probe beam to travel
through a predetermined distance at least corresponding to the coherence
length;
means for combining the thus delayed reference beam with the probe beam to
form a combination beam;
means for subdividing the combination beam into a plurality of
substantially equal component beams;
means for conducting each of the component beams along a separate path to a
separate associated location spaced from the predetermined zone
substantially by one-half of the distance traveled by light in said
predetermined time interval between the respective associated location and
the predetermined zone;
means for reflecting a predetermined portion of each of the component beams
at the respective associated location back into the respective path;
means for directing the remainder of each of the component beams from the
respective associated location to the predetermined zone for return from
said predetermined zone at least predominantly back toward the respective
associated location, in the form of a speckle pattern including dark
speckles which may be situated at least at one but not at all of said
associated locations, and into the respective path with attendant coherent
interference of the probe beam part of the thus returned remainder of the
respective component beam with the reference beam part of the
predetermined portion of the respective component beam resulting in a
return light beam modulated in dependence on the motion of the
predetermined zone relative to the respective associated location except
when one of the dark speckles coincides with said associated location; and
means for concurrently demodulating all of the return light beams to obtain
from those of them that are unaffected by the dark speckles an indication
of the movement of the predetermined zone.
10. The arrangement as defined in claim 9, wherein said conducting means
includes a plurality of separate optical fibers each confining a different
one of the component beams therein.
11. The arrangement as defined in claim 9, wherein said delaying means
includes means for conducting the probe beam in a path of a predetermined
length and the reference beam in another path having a length exceeding
said predetermined length by said predetermined distance.
12. The arrangement as defined in claim 11, wherein said conducting means
of said delaying means includes an optical fiber having a predetermined
length and confining the probe beam therein and another optical fiber
having a length exceeding said predetermined length by said predetermined
distance and confining the reference beam therein.
13. The arrangement as defined in claim 9, and further comprising auxiliary
delaying means for delaying at least one of the component beams relative
to another prior to reaching the respective locations by a period of time
that exceeds said predetermined time interval and is at least in in such a
predetermined ratio thereto that the reflected probe beam part stemming
from one of the component beams reaches a different one of the associated
locations from that associated with the one component beam out of
coherence with the portions of both of the probe and reference beam that
are reflected at the different associated location.
14. The arrangement as defined in claim 13, wherein said predetermined
ratio is an integral multiple of 3.
15. The arrangement as defined in claim 13, wherein said conducting means
includes a plurality of separate optical fibers each confining a different
one of the component beams therein and one having a predetermined length;
and wherein at least one other of said optical fibers has one section of
said predetermined length and another section consecutive with said one
section and having a length that is in said predetermined ratio to said
predetermined distance to consitute said auxiliary delaying means.
16. The arrangement as defined in claim 9, and further comprising means for
recombining the return light beams prior to reaching said demodulating
means.
17. The arrangement as defined in claim 16, wherein said combining,
subdividing and recombining means are constituted by a fiber-optic
coupler.
18. The arrangement as defined in claim 9, and further comprising means for
shifting the frequency of at least one of the reference and probe beams
prior to reaching said combining means by a predetermined carrier
frequency relative to that of the other beam so that the modulation of the
return light beam in dependence on the movement of the predetermined zone
is superimposed on the predetermined carrier frequency. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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TECHNICAL FIELD
This invention relates to interferometric measuring systems and more
particularly to optical measuring arrangements and matters using
interferometers with common optical paths.
BACKGROUND ART
Various interfermetric measuring techniques and devices have been developed
in the past and are still being used. With the advent of optical fibers, a
large number of interferometric measuring systems employing fiber optics
has been proposed. Such systems have widespread application in measuring
vibration and dynamic distortion of mechanical components. Moreover, fiber
optic interferometers are especially suited to metrology because of the
flexibility and size of the components involved.
Fiber optic interferometers of the prior art include those characterized as
modified Mach-Zehnder or Twyman-Green interferometers. In their simplest
form, these interferometers use light from a coherent source split into
two optical beams. One of these beams constitutes a reference beam and
traverses an optical path of a fixed length. The other beam constitues a
probe beam and is guided along an optical path whose length is altered by
the movement of an external object or workpiece being measured. The
reference and probe beams are subsequently coherently recombined to
produce an interference pattern indicative of the vibration or dynamic
distortion of the mechanical element.
Heterodyne optical interferometers are also well known in the art. These
devices are similar to basic Mach-Zehnder and Twyman-Green interferometers
but are modified to include an optical modulator which shifts the optical
frequency of the reference and/or probe beam. As in the basic Mach-Zehnder
or Twyman-Green interferometers, the optical path length of the probe beam
is altered by the vibrating external object. The reference and probe beams
are again subsequently recombined, yielding a frequency modulated (FM)
beam with a carrier frequency equal to the frequency of the optical
modulator and deviations from the carrier frequency caused by the
vibration or dynamic distortion of the external object. The deviations
which are caused by the motion of the external object are then extracted
by conventional FM demodulation techniques.
In fiber optic measuring or gauging systems of the prior art, the reference
and probe beams are usually guided along optical paths that include
separate optical fibers. This configuration ensures that a truly
stationary reference wavefront is used for comparison with the unknown
Doppler shifted wavefront returning from the object. However, the optical
fibers act as microphones in picking up environmental noise. This
environmental noise signal is comprised of unwanted Doppler shifts due to
environmental vibrations and attendant slight variations in the refractive
index of the optical fiber carrying the probe or reference beam, and is
added to the measured vibration signal from the object the motion of which
is being measured, resulting in a distortion of the actual vibration
frequency and amplitude signature imposed onto the returning light beam.
This has, in effect, precluded the use of fiber optic conventional or
heterodyne interferometers in typical manufacturing environments.
To avoid this drawback, it was proposed in a commonly owned U.S. Pat. No.
4,627,731, issued Dec. 9, 1986 and entitled "Common Optical Path
Interferometric Gauge", to use a laser source that produces a laser beam
having a relatively short coherence length and to combine the reference
and probe beams, after the reference beam has been delayed relative to the
probe beam by a time interval of such a length that the reference beam
lags behind the probe beam by a distance at least equal to but
advantagously exceeding the aforementioned coherence length, and let the
thus combined beam propagate in a common path, especially in an optical
fiber, toward a location that is spaced by substantially one-half of the
above distance from the surface of the object the motion of which is to be
measured. At the above location, a portion of the combined beam was
reflected back into the common path, while the remainder of the combined
beam was aimed at a predetermined zone of the object surface and returned
therefrom back to the above location and into the common path, where the
returned part of the probe beam, which has been influenced by the motion
of the aforementioned zone, has coherently interfered with the portion of
the reference beam part that has been reflected at the above location back
into the common path.
While this approach has essentially eliminated the above problem, inasmuch
as the environmental noise had influenced both the probe beam and the
reference beam in substantially the same manner, resulting in cancellation
of the influence of the environmental noise on the interference pattern,
this type of interferometric arrangement still possessed a drawback in
that it was dependent on the location of the above-mentioned location with
respect to the speckle pattern which is formed as the remainder of the
combined beam is returned back from the affected zone of the object
surface. More particularly, the above zone has a finite area which
exhibits surface irregularities having magnitudes capable of distorting
the wavefront of the returning combined beam even when the object surface
is of a very high surface quality, so that the remainder of the combined
beam is scattered to a certain degree during its reflection from the above
zone and forms a speckle pattern that includes bright and dark speckles
due to interference in the returning combined beam. For obvious reasons,
it is not always possible to assure that the above location is situated at
the bright speckle; when it is not, there occurs a signal dropout due to
the low or non-existent intensity of returning light at the above location
due to its alignment with the dark speckle.
Accordingly, it is a general object of the present invention to avoid the
disadvantages of the prior art.
More particularly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a
method of measuring the movement of a vibrating object, which does not
possess the disadvantages of the known methods of this kind.
Still another object of the present invention is so to develop the method
of the type here under consideration as to virtually assure that reliable
measurement results are obtained in spite of the existence of the speckle
pattern.
A concomitant object of the present invention is to devise a measuring
arrangement capable of performing the method of the above type.
An additional object of the present invention is to design the above
measuring arrangement in such a manner as to present reliable measuring
results regardless of the position of the aforementioned location relative
to the speckle pattern.
It is yet another object of the present invention to construct the mirror
arrangement of the above type in such a manner as to be relatively simple
in construction, inexpensive to manufacture, easy to use, and yet reliable
in operation.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
In keeping with these objects and others which will become apparent
hereafter, one feature of the present invention resides in a method of
measuring the movement of a predetermined zone of a surface of a vibrating
object, which method comprises the steps of generating a laser beam having
a predetermined coherence length; separating the laser beam into a probe
beam and a reference beam; delaying the reference beam relative to the
probe beam by a predetermined time interval sufficient for the probe beam
to travel through a predetermined distance at least corresponding to the
coherence length; combining the thus delayed reference beam with the probe
beam to form a combination beam; subdividing the combination beam into a
plurality of substantially equal component beams; conducting each of the
component beams along a separate path to a location spaced from the
predetermined zone substantially by one-half of the distance traveled by
light in said predetermined time interval between the respective location
and the predetermined zone; reflecting a predetermined portion of each of
the component beams at the respective location back into the respective
path; directing the remainder of each of the component beams from the
respective location to the predetermined zone for return therefrom at
least predominantly back toward the respective location and into the
respective path with attendant coherent interference of the probe beam
part of the thus returned remainder of the respective component beam with
the reference beam part of the predetermined portion of the respective
component beam resulting in a return light beam modulated in dependence on
the movement of the predetermined zone relative to the respective
location; and demodulating each of the return light beams to obtain an
indication of the movement of the predetermined zone.
The present invention is also directed to an arrangement for measuring the
movement of a predetermined zone of a surface of a vibrating object.
According to the invention, this arrangement comprises means for
generating a laser beam having a predetermined coherence length; means for
separating the laser beam into a probe beam and a reference beam; means
for delaying the reference beam relative to the probe beam by a
predetermined time interval sufficient for the probe beam to travel
through a predetermined distance at least corresponding to the coherence
length; means for combining the thus delayed reference beam with the probe
beam to form a combination beam; means for subdividing the combination
beam into a plurality of substantially equal component beams; means for
conducting each of the component beams along a separate path to a location
spaced from the predetermined zone substantially by one-half of the
distance traveled by light in said predetermined time interval between the
respective location and the predetermined zone; means for reflecting a
predetermined portion of each of the component beams at the respective
location back into the respective path; means for directing the remainder
of each of the component beams from the respective location to the
predetermined zone for return therefrom at least predominantly back toward
the respective location and into the respective path with attendant
coherent interference of the probe beam part of the thus returned
remainder of the respective component beam with the reference beam part of
the predetermined portion of the respective component beam resulting in a
return light beam modulated in dependence on the motion of the
predetermined zone relative to the respective location; and means for
demodulating each of the return light beams to obtain an indication of the
motion of the predetermined zone.
A particular advantage obtained from the use of the method and arrangement
of the present invention is that there is a plurality of the locations at
which the coherent interference of the returning part of the probe beam
With the reflected portion of the reference beam takes place, so that it
is highly unlikely if not impossible that all of these locations would be
aligned with dark regions of the speckle pattern. In view of the fact that
interference pattern return from one of such locations is sufficient for
detection and evaluation of the movement of the predetermined zone of the
object, the method and arrangement of the present invention virtually
assure that there will be detection under all circumstances, so long as
the above locations are situated within a predetermined distance range
from the predetermined zone and the combination beams are aimed at this
zone.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
The present invention will be described in more detail below with reference
to the accompanying drawing in which:
FIG. 1 is a somewhat simplified side elevational view of a measuring
arrangement embodying the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a partially axially sectioned side elevational view of a wand
portion of a measuring arrangement that is somewhat modified relative to
that of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is an end view of a detail of the wand portion, taken on line 3--3
of FIG. 2;
FIG. 4 is a graphic respesentation of the dependence of the signal level on
the path length difference when using a single mode fiber; and
FIG. 5 is a view corresponding to FIG. 4 but when a multimode fiber with a
10 micron core diameter is being used.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
Referring now to the drawing in detail, and first to FIG. 1 thereof, it may
be seen that the reference numeral 10 has been used therein to identify an
interferometric measuring arrangement constructed in accordance with the
present invention and utilizing optical fiber elements, in its entirety.
The measuring arrangement 10 includes a laser source 11, such as a laser
diode marketed under the designation Sharp LT023MC which operates at a
wavelength of 780 nanometers.
The laser source 11 issues a laser beam 12 having a relatively short
coherence length. The laser beam 12 enters a beam splitting device 13,
which may include a fiber optic coupler, a preceding focusing lens, and
subsequent collimating lenses, and which splits the laser beam 12 into two
substantially equal partial beams 14 and 15 that are coherent with one
another. The partial beam 14 is shown to be directed onto a modulator 16,
especially an acousto-optic modulator or Bragg cell that is commercially
available, for instance, as a Hoya A-100 modulator. The modulator 16
downshifts the frequency of the partial beam 14 by, for example,
approximately 75 MHz. Similarly, the partial beam 15 is shown to be
directed onto a modulator 17 which is advantageously of the same
construction as the modulator 16. The modulator 17 upshifts the frequency
of the partial beam 15 by, for example, approximately 85 MHz, so that
there is a 160 MHz difference between the frequencies of respective
carrier-modulated laser beams 18 and 19 that emerge from the respective
modulators 16 and 17. It will be appreciated that the above-mentioned
frequencies and modulating frequncy distribution which have been used in a
practical embodiment of the present invention are not critical and may be
changed either to change the frequency difference, or to keep it and
change the amounts by which the two modulators 16 and 17 contribute to
this difference, ultimately to the extent that only one of the modulators
16 and 17 is being used and no carrier modulation is imposed on the other
partial beam 15 or 14. In the alternative, both of the modulators 16 and
17 may be omitted if it is not desired to impose carrier modulation on the
partial beams 14 and 15.
In any event, the carrier-modulated partial beams 18 and 19 (and/or the
unmodulated partial beams 14 and 15) are focused by respective lenses 20
and 21 into respective optical fibers or fiber sections 22 and 23 which
are shown to lead from one side to a 3.times.3 fiber-optic coupler 24. The
fiber section 22 has a predetermined length L.sub.1, and the fiber section
23 has a length L.sub.2, the length L.sub.2 exceeding the length L.sub.1
by a distance that at least corresponds to but preferably exceeds the
aforementioned coherence length. This results in a situation where any
region of the partial beam propagating in the optical fiber section 23
will reach the fiber-optic coupler 24 a predetermined time interval, which
corresponds to the transit time of light through the aforementioned
distance, later than the corresponding coherent region of the partial beam
propagating in the optical fiber section 22, so that the light in such
regions will be out of coherence with one another by the time such regions
reach the coupler 24.
In the coupler 24, these partial beams are incoherently combined with one
another, without losing their identites as a probe beam (from the fiber
22) and reference beam (from the fiber 23), and the combined beam is then
subdivided in three substantially equal component beams which leave the
coupler 24 at the other side thereof and are launched into respective
optical fibers 25, 26 and 27. The optical fibers 25, 26 and 27 are
preferably contained in a single optical cable. When either one of the
component beams reaches an end face of the respective fiber 25, 26 and 27,
a portion thereof will be reflected from this end face (or from a coating
applied to this end face) back into the respective fiber 25, 26 or 27 for
propagation back toward the coupler 24.
The remainder of the respective component beam issues from the downstream
and of the respective fiber 25, 26 or 27, and is collimated by a
respective lens 28, 29 or 30 to form a respective collimated component
beam remainder 31, 32 or 33, and the collimated component beam remainders
are focused by a shared lens 34 onto a region or zone 35 of a surface 36
or an object whose vibrations are to be measured. At least a part of the
light that reaches the zone 35 is returned back, usually as scattered
radiation that, as is well known, forms a speckle pattern at the plane of
the end faces of the fibers 25, 26 and 27. When the thus returned light
reaches the end face of the respective fiber, it interferes with any light
with which it is coherent. This means that the probe beam part of the
returning light interferes with the reference beam part of the reflected
portion of the combined beam in the associated optical fiber section 25,
26 or 27.
However, the returning probe beam part stemming from one of the optical
fiber sections, such as 25, could also interfere with reference beam part
of the reflected portion in the other optical fiber sections, such as 26
and 27. This could give erroneous results. To avoid this possibility, the
optical fiber sections 25, 26 and 27 have different lengths L.sub.3,
L.sub.4 and L.sub.5, the lengths L.sub.4 and L.sub.5 being longer than the
length L.sub.3 and than one another, as indicated by a single loop in the
fiber section 26 and by a double loop in the fiber section 27, and being
at least in a predetermined ratio to the aforementioned distance L.sub.2
-L.sub.1. According to the invention, this ratio advantageously is an
integral multiple of 3. This assures that the returning remainders of
either the probe beam part or the reference beam part stemming from one of
the fibers 25, 26 and 27 do not coherently interfere with the reflected
portions of either the probe beam part or the reference beam part
propagating in any other of the fibers 26, 27 or 25.
The returning light beams propagating in the fiber optic sections 25, 26
and 27 eventually reach the 3.times.3 optical coupler 24 where the
component beams are recombined with one another and a portion of the thus
recombined light beam is conducted through another fiber section to a
photodetector 51 which converts the light signal into an electrical
signal, in a well known manner. This electrical signal is then demodulated
in a demodulator 52 of any known construction, particularly an FM
demodulator, to obtain an indication of the vibratory movement of the zone
35.
The locations of the end faces of the fiber sections 25, 26 and 27 are
spaced from the zone 35 by substantially one-half of the distance traveled
by light during the predetermined time interval in the medium or media
situated between these end faces and the zone 35.
Turning now to FIGS. 2 and 3 of the drawing, where the same reference
numerals as before have been used to identify corresponding parts, it may
be seen that the reference numeral 38 designates a sheath which
accommodates the downstream end portions of the fiber sections 25, 26 and
27 and is connected to a housing or wand 39. A holding member 40 is held
substantially centrally in the housing 39 by respective webs 41 and
confines the extreme end portions of the fiber sections in the positions
thereof which are illustrated in FIG. 3, that is, at the corners of an
isosceles triangle. The light emanating from the end faces of the fiber
sections is focused by a shared lens 42 mounted in the housing 39 onto the
zone 35 of the surface 36 of the vibrating object 37. In this particular
construction, the spots formed by the combination beam remainders issuing
from the fiber sections 25, 26 and 27 usually do not coincide, but they
are still close enough to one another to assure that the vibrations of one
and the same zone 35 are being measured.
It is particularly advantageous to use multimode optical fiber exhibiting a
limited number of modes, such as that having a core diameter of
approximately 10 microns, in the arrangement of the present invention. The
reason for this will become apparent from a comparison of FIGS. 4 and 5 of
the drawing with one another. More particularly, if a single mode fiber
were used, the signal level would undergo considerable changes in
dependence on the path length mismatch or difference between the arms of
the interferometer. This is shown in FIG. 4 for a situation where a
GO-1000 laser diode has been used as the laser source, with -108 dBm being
the approximate noise limit of the detection electronics. When, on the
other hand, a multi-mode fiber is being used in the arms of the
interferometer, the characteristic fringe visibility profile of the laser
is repeated several times. The individual profiles overlap by an amount
corresponding to the path differences between the individual modes. The
net result is, as indicated in FIG. 5 of the drawing, a substantially
smoother fringe visibility profile. Consequently, the signal levels from a
multi-mode system are well in excess of the inherent noise over a greater
path mismatch than when using single mode fibers, offering an improved
measurement range for limited coherence length laser diodes.
While the present invention has been illustrated and described as embodied
in a particular construction of a measuring arrangement, it will be
appreciated that the present invention is not limited to this particular
example; rather, the scope of protection of the present invention is to be
determined solely from the attached claims.
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