Measurement of three-dimensional shapes using Light-in-Flight recording by holography
暂无分享,去创建一个
Light-in-Flight recording by holography makes it possible to perlorm accurate three-dimensional shape measurements by single-line contouring. Because ultrashort light pulses are used, both stationary and moving objects may be recorded, e.g., fast-rotating turbine blades, mobile scale models, active human beings, etc. The evaluation is accomplished by an image processing system that reads the contouring line that varies along the hologram and transforms it into spatial coordinates, thereby measuring the three-dimensional shape. There are a number of possible application areas of the method, ranging from practical engineering to medicine.
[1] George O. Reynolds,et al. Sources of Coherent Noise and Their Reduction , 1989 .
[2] N Abramson. Time reconstructions in light-in-flight recording by holography. , 1991, Applied optics.
[3] F. Chiang,et al. Interferometry by Holography , 1980 .
[4] H. H. Madden. Comments on the Savitzky-Golay convolution method for least-squares-fit smoothing and differentiation of digital data , 1976 .
[5] N. Abramson. Light-in-flight recording by holography. , 1978, Optics letters.