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Ghost fringe removal techniques using Lissajous data presentation

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posted on 2024-07-09, 17:58 authored by David J. Erskine, J. H. Eggert, P. M. Celliers, Damien HicksDamien Hicks
A VISAR (Velocity Interferometer System for Any Reflector) is a Dopplervelocity interferometer which is an important optical diagnostic in shockwave experiments at the national laboratories, used to measureequation of state(EOS) of materials under extreme conditions. Unwanted reflection of laser light from target windows can produce an additional component to the VISAR fringe record that can distort and obscure the true velocity signal. Accurately removing this so-called ghost artifact component is essential for achieving high accuracy EOSmeasurements, especially when the true light signal is only weakly reflected from the shock front. Independent of the choice of algorithm for processing the raw data into a complex fringe signal, we have found it beneficial to plot this signal as a Lissajous and seek the proper center of this path, even under time varying intensity which can shift the perceived center. The ghost contribution is then solved by a simple translation in the complex plane that recenters the Lissajous path. For continuous velocity histories, we find that plotting the fringe magnitude vs nonfringing intensity and optimizing linearity is an invaluable tool for determining accurate ghost offsets. For discontinuous velocity histories, we have developed graphically inspired methods which relate the results of two VISARs having different velocity per fringe proportionalities or assumptions of constant fringe magnitude to find the ghost offset. The technique can also remove window reflection artifacts in generic interferometers, such as in the metrology of surfaces.

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PDF (Published version)

ISSN

1089-7623

Journal title

Review of Scientific Instruments

Volume

87

Issue

3

Article number

article no. 033106

Pagination

1 p

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2016 AIP Publishing LLC. The published version is reproduced with permission of the publisher. It may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in Applied Physics Letters and may be found at http://doi.org/10.1063/1.4943563

Language

eng

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