Abstract
Semiconductor laser sources were applied for holographic data recording, storage and display. Holographic interferometers based on semiconductor lasers enable rapid display of acquired data in quasi-real (within several seconds) or real time in situ if advanced holographic techniques on silver halide media are applied.1 In the last case no liquid gates in the recording setup and no repositioning of the interferogram after exposure are required. Semiconductor lasers were also used in electronic speckle pattern interferometry (ESPI). For example a very compact ESPI device with semiconductor laser emitting in the red part of visible spectrum and a special HOE (Fig.1) was successfully used for out-of-plane deformation measurements.2 This HOE when properly illuminated generates a speckled reference wave. A very similiar ESPI interferometer can utilize instead of the HOE a microstructured refractive optical element (MROE) also located in front of CCD camera. The HROE shifts object and reference waves horizontally and guides them in-line to the CCD sensor.
© 2000 IEEE
PDF ArticleMore Like This
John Tyrer
MC2 Holography (Holography) 1986
Amalia Martínez-García, Raúl Cordero, and J. A. Rayas
LM1A.3 Latin America Optics and Photonics Conference (LAOP) 2014
Ariel Schwarz, Amir Shemer, Nisan Ozana, Javier García, and Zeev Zalevsky
JW2A.1 CLEO: Applications and Technology (CLEO:A&T) 2017