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| United States Patent | 4938596 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4938596.html |
| Inventor(s) | Gauthier; Daniel J. (Rochester, NY);
Boyd; Robert W. (Rochester, NY);
Jungquist; Robert (Rochester, NY);
Voci; Laurie L. (Farmington, NY) |
| Abstract | A phase conjugate interferometer has a partially reflective conventional
mirror placed in front of and in close proximity to a phase conjugate
mirror using internally self pumped phase conjugation in barium titanate
or other photorefractive material. The reflective surface may be the
surface of the phase conjugate mirror. An optical system under test is
illuminated with coherent light and the wavefront at the exit pupil
thereof is imaged through a beam splitter onto the reflective surface
(imaging being unnecessary if the distance between the exit pupil and the
reflective surface is sufficiently small that negligible diffraction
occurs over that distance). Part of the wavefront is reflected at the
reflective surface of the partially reflecting conventional mirror. The
transmitted portion of the wavefront is incident on the phase conjugate
mirror where a wavefront reversed replica of the incident wave is produced
and reflected. The two reflected waves (from the conventional and from the
phase conjugate mirror travel back towards the exit pupil. The
interference pattern which characterizes the incident wavefront is formed
at the reflective surface of the conventional mirror. The interferometer
is an essentially perfect common path interferometer for the following
reason: the only path that is not common to the two waves is the round
trip path between the conventional and phase conjugate mirrors, which has
zero effective path due to the wavefront reversal properties of phase
conjugate mirrors. The pattern is deflected by the beam splitter to an
observation plane. The pattern is imaged, as by a relay lens, on the
observation plane where the interference fringes of the pattern can be
examined or recorded on photographic film or displayed with a television
camera. That portion of the optical path between the reflective surface
and the phase conjugate mirror (which provides the reference arm) of the
interferometer is not subject to environmental effects (turbulence,
thermally induced pathlength changes, etc.) and the path through which the
reflected object beam travels to the location where the interference
pattern with the reference beam is formed is extremely small and not
affected by environmental effects. Accordingly, the interferometer is
robust and can be made extremely compact. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4938596 |
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Phase conjugate, common path interferometer |
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| Publication Date |
July 3, 1990 |
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| Filing Date |
January 5, 1989 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| *references marked with an asterisk below are user-added references |
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U.S. References |
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| | Reference | Relevancy | Comments | Reference | Relevancy | Comments | 4820049 Biegen 356/513 Apr,1989 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4767195 Pepper 359/276 Aug,1988 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4765740 Fischer 356/459 Aug,1988 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4762394 Kwong 359/618 Aug,1988 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4721362 Brody
Jan,1988 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4718749 Chiou 359/577 Jan,1988 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4682025 Livingston 250/201.9 Jul,1987 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4648092 Ewbank 372/18 Mar,1987 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4637725 Stefanov 356/520 Jan,1987 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4627731 Waters 356/479 Dec,1986 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4575245 Borde 356/450 Mar,1986 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4571080 Papuchon 356/477 Feb,1986 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4492468 Huignard 356/458 Jan,1985 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4280764 Sica, Jr. 356/35.5 Jul,1981 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4210400 Misek 356/450 Jul,1980 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | | | | |
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References  |
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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We claim:
1. An interferometer for characterizing a wavefront which comprises a
partially reflective mirror (PRM) defined by a partially reflective
surface on which said wavefront is incident and through which said
waveform is transmitted without deflection from a path along which said
wavefront propagates, a phase conjugate mirror (PCM) along said path on
which said waveform which is transmitted through said PRM is incident and
from which the phase conjugate of said wavefront is reflected to form an
interference pattern at said surface with the wavefront reflected by said
PRM, and means for forming an image of said pattern.
2. The interferometer according to claim 1 wherein said image forming means
is a relay lens.
3. The interferometer according to claim 2 further comprising an
observation plane, a beam splitter through which said wavefront is
transmitted to said PRM and from which said pattern is deflected to said
plane, said relay lens being disposed between said beam splitter and said
plane for forming said image of said pattern on said plane.
4. The interferometer according to claim 3 wherein said observation plane
is defined by a photoresponsive sensor.
5. The interferometer according to claim 4 wherein said sensor is selected
from the group consisting of a photosensitive film and TV camera.
6. The interferometer according to claim 1 wherein said PRM is a light
transmissive plate having a partially reflective planar surface which
provides said partially reflective surface.
7. The interferometer according to claim 1 wherein said PRM is a light
transmissive body having a partially reflective surface which is a curved
surface having a curvature corresponding to the curvature of said
wavefront.
8. The interferometer according to claim 1 wherein said wavefront eminates
from an optical system under test having an exit pupil, said PRM is a lens
which images said exit pupil on said PCM, said lens having a surface which
is partially reflective facing said exit pupil.
9. The interferometer according to claim 8 wherein said lens is a
plano-convex lens having a planar surface providing said partially
reflective surface and which faces said exit pupil and a curved surface
facing said PCM.
10. The interferometer according to claim 1 wherein said PRM is provided by
said PCM, said partially reflective surface being the surface of said PCM
on which said waveform is incident.
11. The interferometer according to claim 1 wherein said wavefront eminates
from an optical system under test having an exit pupil which is spaced
from said PRM a distance over which the diffraction of said wavefront can
occur, and a lens between said exit pupil and said PRM which forms an
image of said exit pupil on said partially reflective surface.
12. The interferometer according to claim 11 further comprising a beam
splitter between said lens and said PRM oriented to deflect light
travelling in a direction from said partially reflective surface to an
observation plane, said means for forming an image of said pattern being a
relay lens between said beam splitter and said observation plane.
13. The interferometer according to claim 11 wherein said distance is
greater than D.sup.2 /lamda where D is the diameter of said exit pupil and
lamda is the wavelength of the light of said wave front.
14. The interferometer according to claim 12 further comprising means for
generating said wavefront which includes a source of monochromatic light,
means for collimating said light into a beam which is transmitted through
said system under test and which eminates from the exit pupil thereof,
said beam passing through said beam splitter and then through said PRM to
said PCM, said beam being reflected by said PCM to form said pattern at
said partially reflective surface and said beam being deflected by said
beam splitter and imaged by said relay lens on said observation plane.
15. The interferometer according to claim 14 wherein said generating means
further comprises a spatial filter between said source and said
collimating means.
16. The interferometer according to claim 15 wherein said generating means
further comprises a Faraday isolator between said source and said spatial
filter.
17. The interferometer according to claim 1 wherein said partially
reflective surface of said PRM is spaced immediately adjacent to said PCM.
18. The interferometer according to claim 1 wherein a laser provides the
light forming said wavefront, said PRM being spaced less than the
coherence length of the light from said laser from said PCM.
19. The interferometer according to claim 1 wherein said PCM is crystal of
photorefractive material having a c-axis and a surface on which said
wavefront is incident, said c-axis being disposed within 30.degree. of
parallelism with the surface of said crystal on which said wavefront is
incident.
20. The interferometer according to claim 1 wherein said crystal is of
material selected from the group consisting of barium titanate and
strontium barium niobate. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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DESCRIPTION
The present invention relates to interferometers and more particularly to
interferometers using a phase conjugate mirror (PCM) which provides a
phase conjugate replica of the object beam which contains the wavefront to
be characterized as the reference beam and a partially reflective surface
in front of and in close proximity to the PCM or a surface thereof which
reflects the object beam so that the reflected reference beam from the PCM
and the object beam interfere over a common path at the reflective surface
and provide an interference pattern which is imaged on an observation
plane where the interference fringes characterizing the wavefront can be
examined.
The present invention is useful in testing optical systems, for example
determining the aberrations in lenses of an optical system under test. The
system is also useful in distance measurement by interferometry as well as
in other applications of interferometry.
Interferometers have been proposed which utilize phase conjugate mirrors.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,280,764 issued Jul. 28, 1981 describes a Michelson type
interferometer using a PCM in one arm. Like other phase conjugate
interferometers there is another arm which provides another beam which
interferes with the phase conjugate reflected from the PCM, usually at a
beam splitter. While aberrations, which may be due to environmental
effects, do not perturb the arm defined by the PCM, the other arm is
subject to environmental effects. Accordingly, such known PCM
interferometers are not stable and the interference fringes which they
produce jitter and are difficult to examine, except under extremely stable
conditions. Any vibration, thermally induced pathlength changes, or
turbulence (such as wind which passes through the other arm of the
interferometer, even when a door is opened) adversely affects the
operation of the interferometer. There are, of course interferometers
which do not use phase conjugate mirrors and these are very sensitive to
environmental disturbances. One such interferometer is known as the Fizeau
interferometer which is described in the text "Optical Shop Testing", D.
P. Malacara, Ed. John Wiley, New York (1978), pp. 18-36. Some of the
principles of the Fizeau type interferometer are incorporated in the
interferometer used in carrying out this invention.
Accordingly, it is the principal object of the present invention to provide
an improved phase conjugate interferometer which is robust and less
sensitive to environmental effects than interferometers heretofore
suggested whether of the phase conjugate or non-phase conjugate type.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an improved phase
conjugate interferometer which may be extremely compact and occupy a very
small space.
It is a still further object of the present invention to provide an
improved Fizeau interferometer utilizing a phase conjugate mirror.
Briefly described, an interferometer embodying the invention characterizes
a wavefront which may be obtained by a beam of coherent light passing
through an optical system under test. A partially reflective mirror (PRM)
is provided which is defined by a partially reflective surface on which
the wavefront is incident and through which the wavefront is transmitted.
The transmitted wavefront is incident on a phase conjugate mirror (PCM).
The surface of the PCM on which the wavefront is incident can provide the
partially reflective surface of the PRM. Then the interferometer can be
made extremely compact. The phase conjugate of the wavefront is reflected
to form an interference pattern at the partially reflective surface with
the wavefront reflected by the PRM at that surface. Means are provided for
forming an image of the pattern. This image may be formed at an
observation plane by reflecting the light from the pattern off a beam
splitter through a relay lens.
More particularly, and in accordance with a presently preferred embodiment,
the invention provides a phase conjugate interferometer having a partially
reflective conventional mirror placed in front of and in close proximity
to a phase conjugate mirror using internally self pumped phase conjugation
in barium titanate or other non-linear optical or photorefractive
material. The reflective surface may be the surface of the phase conjugate
mirror. An optical system under test is illuminated with coherent light
and the wavefront at the exit pupil thereof is imaged through a beam
splitter on the reflective surface (imaging being unnecessary if the
distant between the exit pupil and the reflective surface is sufficiently
small that negligible diffraction occurs over that distance). Part of the
wavefront is reflected at the reflective surface of the partially
reflecting conventional mirror. The transmitted portion of the wavefront
is incident on the phase conjugate mirror where a wavefront reversed
replica of the incident wave is produced and reflected. The two reflected
waves (from the conventional and from the phase conjugate mirror) travel
back towards the exit pupil. The interference pattern which characterizes
the incident wavefront is formed at the reflective surface of the
conventional mirror. The interferometer is an essentially perfect common
path interferometer for the following reason: the only path that is not
common to the two waves is the round trip path between the conventional
and phase conjugate mirrors, which has zero effective path due to the
wavefront reversal properties of phase conjugate mirrors. The pattern is
deflected by the beam splitter to an observation plane. The pattern is
imaged, as by a relay lens, on the observation plane where the
interference fringes of the pattern can be examined or recorded on
photographic film or displayed with a television camera. That portion of
the optical path between the reflective surface and the phase conjugate
mirror (which provides the reference arm) of the interferometer is not
subject to environmental effects (turbulence, thermally induced pathlength
changes, etc.) and the path through which the reflected object beam
travels to the location where the interference pattern with the reference
beam is formed is extremely small and not affected by environmental
effects. Accordingly, the interferometer is robust and can be made
extremely compact.
The foregoing and other objects and features of the invention as well as
the presently preferred embodiments thereof will become more apparent from
a reading of the following description in connection with the accompanying
drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a block diagram schematically illustrating an embodiment of the
invention; and
FIGS. 2, 3 and 4 are block diagrams illustrating other embodiments of the
invention.
Referring to FIG. 1 there is shown a source of coherent light 10. This
source may be a laser. It has been found that a single transverse, single
longitudinal mode argon ion laser operated at a wavelength of 515 nm which
delivers approximately 50 mW is suitable. It should be appreciated that
the interferometer system 12 may operate with any source of coherent light
whether of known or unknown wavelength.
The output beam of the laser is passed through a Faraday isolator 14, which
may be of conventional design with polarizer and analyzer ahead of and in
back of a body of magneto-optic material (i.e., a material that produces
the Faraday effect) in a magnetic field. This isolator 14 prevents
feedback of light back into the laser 10 which may be reflected back from
the phase conjugate mirror 16 of the interferometer system 12. The beam
may be passed to a spatial filter 18 in the form of a lens followed by an
aperture in which the beam is focused in order to precondition the
waveform and reduce any aberrations therein. The output of the filter 18
is collimated by a collimating lens 20 or other collimating optics and
passed through an optical system under test (SUT) 22. This may be any
optical system which affects the wavefront such as a lens or lens system
(e.g. a telescope). The system is tested and aberrations therein
determined by characterizing the wavefront emanating from its exit pupil.
The exit pupil is the image of the aperture stop of the SUT as seen by an
observer in the output space of the system looking backwards into the SUT.
It is the wavefront at the exit pupil which is characterized by the
interferometer system 12. This wavefront is imaged by an imaging lens 24
and the image thereof is characterized by the interferometer system 12.
The imaging lens, 24, is not needed if it is acceptable to determine the
wavefront structure of the exiting wave at the plane of a surface of a 26.
The imaging lens counteracts the diffraction (spreading apart) of the
wavefront between the exit pupil and the location in the system 12 where
the interference pattern is formed., This is the reflective surface of the
mirror 26 which is a partially transmitting conventional mirror 26 in the
system 12. If this mirror was at a distance from the exit pupil
sufficiently small that negligible diffraction occurs in that distance,
the imaging lens would not be needed. This distance would be less than
D.sup.2 /lamda where D is the diameter of the exit pupil and lamda is the
wavelength of the laser light.
In the interferometer system, the PCM 16 may be a crystal of non-linear
photorefractive material. Barium titanate may be used as the crystal. The
axis of symmetry or c-axis of the crystal should be within 30.degree. of
parallelism with the surface 27 of the PCM on which the wavefront is
incident. In the event that improvement in sensitivity of measurement
(higher resolution of the fringes of the interference pattern) is desired,
AC interferometric techniques may be used by modulating the phase of the
conjugate wave reflected from the PCM by applying a modulating voltage to
the PCM. A modulating voltage source 28, for example of 1000 Hz may be
applied to the crystal for this purpose. It will be understood that the
use of the source and the AC interferometric techniques is entirely
optional. Other photorefractive materials such as strontium barium niobate
may also be used. The partially transmitting conventional mirror is
disposed in front of the PCM and may be spaced very close to the surface
27 thereof. The spacing may be larger, but should not exceed the coherence
length of the laser. Close spacing is preferred since it provides a
compact design. Four wave mixing, rather than self pumped phase
conjugation may be used, but is not preferred, since the wavelength of the
light of this wavefront to be characterized must be known.
The partially transmitting conventional mirror 26 as shown in FIG. 1 is a
plate of glass. Its reflective surface may be the surface on which the
wavefront is incident, the reflection being provided by the inherent
Fresnel reflection (approximately 4%) from the surface of the plate of
glass. A thin film optical coating may be used to provide the reflective
surface. The coating should be selected such that the percentage of the
illumination reflected is approximately equal to the intensity of the
phase conjugate reflection from the PCM.
A beam splitter 30 inclines so that it deflects the light from the
reflective surface perpendicular to the optical path 32 to an observation
plane 34. This observation plane may be defined by a sheet of material on
which the interference pattern becomes visible or it may be defined by a
sensor 36, either a photographic film or plate or a T.V. camera which is
then, of course, connected to a television display on which the
interference pattern will appear. This display is synchronized with the
modulating voltage when AC interferometric techniques are used. Imaging
means, such as a relay lens 38, provides an image of the reflective
surface (in the immediate vicinity of which the interference pattern
appears) on the observation plane.
The wavefront at the exit pupil passes through the beam splitter 30 and
then through the partially transmitting mirror. Part of the incident
wavefront is reflected at the reflective surface of the mirror 26. The
transmitted portion of the wavefront is incident on the PCM 16 where a
wavefront reversed replica of the incident wavefront is produced. The
reflected waves exist at the reflective surface of the mirror 26 where the
interference pattern is formed. This is the plane where the reference
wavefront from the PCM and the object wavefront interfere and where these
two wavefronts are phase conjugates of each other. The interference
pattern travels back towards the exit pupil and is deflected by the beam
splitter. The relay lens forms a real image of the pattern on the
observation plane.
Referring to FIG. 2, there is shown a system which is especially useful
when the PCM crystal is small. The partially transmitting conventional
mirror is provided by a plano-convex lens 40 which focuses the light on
the surface of the PCM. The partially reflective surface is the planar
surface 42 of the lens 40.
Referring to FIG. 3, an extremely compact embodiment of the invention is
provided where the conventional mirror is provided by the partially
transmissive reflecting surface 27 of the PCM. Part of the incident light
is reflected from the front surface of the crystal and subsequently
interferes with the light generated inside the crystal by the self-pump
phase conjugation process. The interference pattern is formed at the
surface 27 and is imaged by the relay lens 38 on the observation plane 34.
The surface 27 may be tilted by tilting the PCM crystal 16 in order to form
tilt fringes for a reference wave front from a SUT having no aberrations.
Then this pattern can be compared with the pattern with a system to be
tested in place and the aberrations determined by comparing the location
of the fringes of the two patterns. The tilt may be very slight, suitably
a few degrees from perpendicular to a beam path 32.
Referring to FIG. 4, there is shown a curved partially transmissive
conventional mirror 44 having a curved reflective surface. This may be a
curvature designed to be sufficient to null out any overall curvature of
the incident wavefront. This makes it easier to detect deviations in the
wavefront. For example, if the SUT was a spherical lens to be tested to
determine any aberrations therein, the partially transmissive conventional
mirror 44 would have a spherical curvature equal to the overall curvature
of the spherical lens. Then the overall curvature would be nulled in the
wavefronts which interfere to form the interference pattern.
From the foregoing description, it will be apparent that there has been
provided improved phased conjugate interferometers which are robust and
which may be designed to be extremely compact. Variations and
modifications in the herein described interferometers within the scope of
the invention will undoubtedly suggest themselves to those skilled in the
art. Accordingly, the foregoing description should be taken as
illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
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Description  |
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