Gated MCP framing camera system

1997 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aurelia Secroun ◽  
Alain Mens ◽  
Jacques Segre ◽  
Franck Assous ◽  
Emmanuel Piault ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2014 ◽  
Vol 26 (10) ◽  
pp. 102001
Author(s):  
李晋 Li Jin ◽  
杨志文 Yang Zhiwen ◽  
杨品 Yang Pin ◽  
杨正华 Yang Zhenghua ◽  
董建军 Dong Jianjun ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanbing Jiang ◽  
Huiming Yan ◽  
Xiuda Zhang ◽  
Long Wang ◽  
Yan Li
Keyword(s):  

2004 ◽  
Vol 75 (11) ◽  
pp. 4754-4762 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Kocsis ◽  
S. Kálvin ◽  
G. Veres ◽  
P. Cierpka ◽  
P. T. Lang ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 823 ◽  
pp. 012009
Author(s):  
Satoshi Ohdachi ◽  
Shigeru Inagaki ◽  
Tatsuya Kobayashi ◽  
Motoshi Goto

2016 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 78-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie Johnson ◽  
Michael Clemenson ◽  
Nick Glumac

A dual framing camera system was coupled with custom-designed ultrafast imaging spectrometer optics to yield simultaneous imaging and imaging spectroscopy of extremely short detonation interaction events in reactive materials. For short exposures of 100 ns or less, spectral resolutions of 2.4 Å are achievable, allowing for time-resolved identification of key intermediate species evolving from prompt reaction. Under some circumstances, emission can be fit to a local emission temperature, assuming the optically thin limit. Applications to reactive metal systems involving aluminum, magnesium, titanium, boron, and silicon are demonstrated.


2013 ◽  
Vol 655-657 ◽  
pp. 749-752
Author(s):  
Hao Yu

In order to meet the demand of diagnostic equipment on the intelligent network testing for inertial confinement fusion (ICF) research, an intelligent X-ray framing camera system is designed and implemented. Embedded PC/104 bus masters the whole system and realizes human-machine communication and networking. The self-designed multifunction interface card can realize the camera work point setting, mode switching and environment monitoring. The specialized software and hardware make the camera has the ability of self-diagnosis and automatically adjust work point. The system improves the stability, reliability, consistency and precision of the camera. It is significant for furthering analysis the ICF issue.


Author(s):  
W.J. de Ruijter ◽  
Sharma Renu

Established methods for measurement of lattice spacings and angles of crystalline materials include x-ray diffraction, microdiffraction and HREM imaging. Structural information from HREM images is normally obtained off-line with the traveling table microscope or by the optical diffractogram technique. We present a new method for precise measurement of lattice vectors from HREM images using an on-line computer connected to the electron microscope. It has already been established that an image of crystalline material can be represented by a finite number of sinusoids. The amplitude and the phase of these sinusoids are affected by the microscope transfer characteristics, which are strongly influenced by the settings of defocus, astigmatism and beam alignment. However, the frequency of each sinusoid is solely a function of overall magnification and periodicities present in the specimen. After proper calibration of the overall magnification, lattice vectors can be measured unambiguously from HREM images.Measurement of lattice vectors is a statistical parameter estimation problem which is similar to amplitude, phase and frequency estimation of sinusoids in 1-dimensional signals as encountered, for example, in radar, sonar and telecommunications. It is important to properly model the observations, the systematic errors and the non-systematic errors. The observations are modelled as a sum of (2-dimensional) sinusoids. In the present study the components of the frequency vector of the sinusoids are the only parameters of interest. Non-systematic errors in recorded electron images are described as white Gaussian noise. The most important systematic error is geometric distortion. Lattice vectors are measured using a two step procedure. First a coarse search is obtained using a Fast Fourier Transform on an image section of interest. Prior to Fourier transformation the image section is multiplied with a window, which gradually falls off to zero at the edges. The user indicates interactively the periodicities of interest by selecting spots in the digital diffractogram. A fine search for each selected frequency is implemented using a bilinear interpolation, which is dependent on the window function. It is possible to refine the estimation even further using a non-linear least squares estimation. The first two steps provide the proper starting values for the numerical minimization (e.g. Gauss-Newton). This third step increases the precision with 30% to the highest theoretically attainable (Cramer and Rao Lower Bound). In the present studies we use a Gatan 622 TV camera attached to the JEM 4000EX electron microscope. Image analysis is implemented on a Micro VAX II computer equipped with a powerful array processor and real time image processing hardware. The typical precision, as defined by the standard deviation of the distribution of measurement errors, is found to be <0.003Å measured on single crystal silicon and <0.02Å measured on small (10-30Å) specimen areas. These values are ×10 times larger than predicted by theory. Furthermore, the measured precision is observed to be independent on signal-to-noise ratio (determined by the number of averaged TV frames). Obviously, the precision is restricted by geometric distortion mainly caused by the TV camera. For this reason, we are replacing the Gatan 622 TV camera with a modern high-grade CCD-based camera system. Such a system not only has negligible geometric distortion, but also high dynamic range (>10,000) and high resolution (1024x1024 pixels). The geometric distortion of the projector lenses can be measured, and corrected through re-sampling of the digitized image.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng Li Wei ◽  
Ang Cher Wee ◽  
Chan Wai Herng ◽  
Ying Meng Fai

Author(s):  
Alexander Richards ◽  
Matthew Weschler ◽  
Michael Durller

Abstract To help solve the navigational problem, i.e., being able to successfully locate a circuit for probing or editing without destroying chip functionality, a near-infrared (NIR), near-ultraviolet (NUV), and visible spectrum camera system was developed that attaches to most focused ion beam (FIB) or scanning electron microscope vacuum chambers. This paper reviews the details of the design and implementation of the NIR/NUV camera system, as instantiated upon the FEI FIB 200, with a particular focus on its use for the visualization of buried structures, and also for non-destructive real time area of interest location and end point detection. It specifically considers the use of the micro-optical camera system for its benefit in assisting with frontside and backside circuit edit, as well as other typical FIB milling activities. The quality of the image obtained by the IR camera rivals or exceeds traditional optical based imaging microscopy techniques.


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