Digital in-line holography (DIH) with a divergent beam is used to measure size and concentration of cavitation bubbles (6-100 μm) in hydrodynamic facilities. A sampling probe is directly inserted in the cavitation tunnel, and the holograms of the bubbles are recorded through a transparent test section specially designed for DIH measurements. The recording beam coming from a fiber-coupled laser diode illuminates the sample volume, and holograms are recorded by a CMOS camera. From each hologram, the sampling volume can be reconstructed slice by slice by applying a wavelet-based reconstruction method. Because of the geometry of the recording beam, a magnification ratio must be introduced for recovering the 3D location and size of each bubble. The method used for processing holograms recorded in such a configuration is presented. Then, statistical results obtained from 5000 holograms recorded under different pressures in the cavitation tunnel are compared and discussed.
The development of initial disturbances is relevant to the understanding of atomization processes in which droplets are generated by the breakup of a liquid jet. We theoretically and experimentally demonstrate that such disturbances can be characterized by rainbow sizing. More specifically, for a liquid jet with a diameter of 600 mum, disturbances in the range from 10 nm to 0.2 mum are accessible.
A new-generation velocimeter/sizemeter is described. Size discussed and compared with other techniques (pedestal, measurement is based on the top-hat beam technique. Velocity visibility, phase Doppler). Bubble diagnosis in a turbulent pipe measurement is carried out by using laser Doppler velocimetry.flow is reported. Advantages and limitations of the top-hat beam technique are
The 50-year life span of Applied Optics covers also approximately the time I have been engaged in optics. I started in 1962 [1] with the Institute for Optics and Spectroscopy, which was one of several Academy Institutes (mission statement: "theoria cum praxi," G. Leibniz) located in Berlin-Adlershof on the area of the first airfield in Berlin dating back to the beginning of the 20th century.
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