Recovery of High Frequency Phase of Laser Beam with Wavefront Distortion

2011 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 0402009 ◽  
Author(s):  
付福兴 Fu Fuxing ◽  
张彬 Zhang Bin
2013 ◽  
Vol 25 (10) ◽  
pp. 2505-2510
Author(s):  
贺也洹 He Yehuan ◽  
韩开 Han Kai ◽  
张彬 Zhang Bin

2014 ◽  
Vol 644-650 ◽  
pp. 1433-1437
Author(s):  
Fu Xing Fu

When laser beam is effected on the material, the surface properties of material can be damaged, and the damage effect is different for the different laser beams. Nevertheless, the distribution of laser intensity is influenced by the proportion of high-frequency phase in wavefront. By researching the propagation character of wavefront phase, the relation of high-frequency phase and laser intensity is given in this paper. The results show that the focal spot increases gradually with the increase of the proportion of high-frequency phase, the peak value of intensity decreases obviously, and the number of side lobe increases observably.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 648-655 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Li ◽  
Z. Lu ◽  
X. Fan ◽  
L. Ding

AbstractThe effect of the initial phase distortion of the laser on near-field transmission characteristics in free space is investigated both numerically and theoretically. It is demonstrated and proposed that the near-field modulation and fluence contrast of the output laser beam are changing with the increase of both spatial low- and high-frequency wavefront distortion. The simulation results show that in order to ensure the beam quality in propagation, the Fresnel number should be controlled not <50 generally and the wavefront distortion should also be minimized by controlling both low- and high-frequency phase coefficient not larger than 0.6.


1965 ◽  
Vol 53 (11) ◽  
pp. 1784-1785
Author(s):  
E. Kantarizis

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Yin ◽  
Qian Chen ◽  
Shijie Feng ◽  
Tianyang Tao ◽  
Lei Huang ◽  
...  

AbstractThe multi-frequency temporal phase unwrapping (MF-TPU) method, as a classical phase unwrapping algorithm for fringe projection techniques, has the ability to eliminate the phase ambiguities even while measuring spatially isolated scenes or the objects with discontinuous surfaces. For the simplest and most efficient case in MF-TPU, two groups of phase-shifting fringe patterns with different frequencies are used: the high-frequency one is applied for 3D reconstruction of the tested object and the unit-frequency one is used to assist phase unwrapping for the wrapped phase with high frequency. The final measurement precision or sensitivity is determined by the number of fringes used within the high-frequency pattern, under the precondition that its absolute phase can be successfully recovered without any fringe order errors. However, due to the non-negligible noises and other error sources in actual measurement, the frequency of the high-frequency fringes is generally restricted to about 16, resulting in limited measurement accuracy. On the other hand, using additional intermediate sets of fringe patterns can unwrap the phase with higher frequency, but at the expense of a prolonged pattern sequence. With recent developments and advancements of machine learning for computer vision and computational imaging, it can be demonstrated in this work that deep learning techniques can automatically realize TPU through supervised learning, as called deep learning-based temporal phase unwrapping (DL-TPU), which can substantially improve the unwrapping reliability compared with MF-TPU even under different types of error sources, e.g., intensity noise, low fringe modulation, projector nonlinearity, and motion artifacts. Furthermore, as far as we know, our method was demonstrated experimentally that the high-frequency phase with 64 periods can be directly and reliably unwrapped from one unit-frequency phase using DL-TPU. These results highlight that challenging issues in optical metrology can be potentially overcome through machine learning, opening new avenues to design powerful and extremely accurate high-speed 3D imaging systems ubiquitous in nowadays science, industry, and multimedia.


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