1,529 research outputs found
Heterodyne Holography with full control of both signal and reference arms
Heterodyne holography is a variant of phase shifting holography in which
reference and signal arms are controlled by acousto optic modulators. In this
review paper, we will briefy describe the method and its properties, and we
will illustrate its advantages in experimental applications
Spatiotemporal heterodyne detection
We describe a scheme into which a camera is turned into an efficient tunable
frequency filter of a few Hertz bandwidth in an off-axis, heterodyne optical
mixing configuration, enabling to perform parallel, high-resolution coherent
spectral imaging. This approach is made possible through the combination of a
spatial and temporal modulation of the signal to reject noise contributions.
Experimental data obtained with dynamically scattered light by a suspension of
particles in brownian motion is interpreted
(DH) Noise and Signal scaling factors in Digital Holography in week illumination: relationship with Shot Noise
We have performed off axis heterodyne holography with very weak illumination
by recording holograms of the object with and without object illumination in
the same acquisition run. We have experimentally studied, how the reconstructed
image signal (with illumination) and noise background (without) scale with the
holographic acquisition and reconstruction parameters that are the number of
frames, and the number of pixels of the reconstruction spatial filter. The
first parameter is related to the frequency bandwidth of detection in time, the
second one to the bandwidth in space. The signal to background ratio varies
roughly like the inverse of the bandwidth in time and space. We have also
compared the noise background with the theoretical shot noise background
calculated by Monte Carlo simulation. The experimental and Monte Carlo noise
background agree very well together
Phase-resolved heterodyne holographic vibrometry with a strobe local oscillator
We report a demonstration of phase-resolved vibrometry, in which out-of-plane
sinusoidal motion is assessed by heterodyne holography. In heterodyne
holography, the beam in the reference channel is an optical local oscillator
(LO). It is frequency-shifted with respect to the illumination beam to enable
frequency conversion within the sensor bandwidth. The proposed scheme
introduces a strobe LO, where the reference beam is frequency-shifted and
modulated in amplitude, to alleviate the issue of phase retrieval. The strobe
LO is both tuned around the first optical modulation side band at the vibration
frequency, and modulated in amplitude to freeze selected mechanical vibration
states sequentially. The phase map of the vibration can then be derived from
the demodulation of successive vibration states
Digital Holography at Shot Noise Level
By a proper arrangement of a digital holography setup, that combines off-axis
geometry with phase-shifting recording conditions, it is possible to reach the
theoretical shot noise limit, in real-time experiments.We studied this limit,
and we show that it corresponds to 1 photo-electron per pixel within the whole
frame sequence that is used to reconstruct the holographic image. We also show
that Monte Carlo noise synthesis onto holograms measured at high illumination
levels enables accurate representation of the experimental holograms measured
at very weak illumination levels. An experimental validation of these results
is done
- …