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Speckle-free imaging using a multimode fiber has been widely used for imaging systems. Generally, previous work has assumed that all the propagating modes of the fiber are uniformly excited, but the modal power distribution is actually affected by excitation conditions. Here, we propose the utilization of a modal analysis method to study the dependence of the speckle contrast on the modal power distribution by changing the tilt angle of the Gaussian beam and on the group delay time difference caused by different fiber lengths. The results of numerical simulations and experiments show that, with an increase in the tilt angle of the Gaussian beam, the modal power is transferred to higher-order modes and the maximum delay difference between excitation modes becomes larger. Therefore, the inter-mode interference effect is effectively weakened, and the speckle contrast is significantly reduced. The increase in fiber length will also make the delay difference between excitation modes larger and thus the speckle contrast is decreased. For the larger tilt angle of the Gaussian beam, only a shorter optical fiber is required to reduce the speckle contrast significantly. Our work further promotes the use of a multimode fiber to produce speckle-free patterns in laser imaging systems.
Speckle-free imaging using a multimode fiber has been widely used for imaging systems. Generally, previous work has assumed that all the propagating modes of the fiber are uniformly excited, but the modal power distribution is actually affected by excitation conditions. Here, we propose the utilization of a modal analysis method to study the dependence of the speckle contrast on the modal power distribution by changing the tilt angle of the Gaussian beam and on the group delay time difference caused by different fiber lengths. The results of numerical simulations and experiments show that, with an increase in the tilt angle of the Gaussian beam, the modal power is transferred to higher-order modes and the maximum delay difference between excitation modes becomes larger. Therefore, the inter-mode interference effect is effectively weakened, and the speckle contrast is significantly reduced. The increase in fiber length will also make the delay difference between excitation modes larger and thus the speckle contrast is decreased. For the larger tilt angle of the Gaussian beam, only a shorter optical fiber is required to reduce the speckle contrast significantly. Our work further promotes the use of a multimode fiber to produce speckle-free patterns in laser imaging systems.
In the paper we study the method of reducing environmental influence in broadband laser frequency scanning interferometer. Target displacement caused by vibration will result in Doppler shift in measurement beat frequency. The extent of frequency shift is usually much larger than the actual target displacement. So the direct calculating of the target distance will cause ranging precision to decrease. In this paper, we establish a model for the influence of environmental vibration on the measurement and analyze the influence of the vibration on ranging result. To suppress the vibration effect, the Kalman filter is combined with the overlapping Chirp Z transform to estimate the measured data. The general process is described as follows. Firstly, the tuning nonlinearity will lead to the frequency spectrum broadening, so this paper we use the frequency sampling method to correct the frequency modulation nonlinearity of the laser. The frequency sampling method has the advantages of high speed and high precision. Secondly, the measurement system has the dispersion mismatch effect due to the use of broadband frequency swept laser. To solve this problem, the influence of the dispersion on the measurement is reduced by using the method of dispersion chirp slope calibration. Thirdly, because of the long frequency sweep period of the external cavity swept frequency laser, the vibration process of the target cannot be recorded in real time by single sweep, so in this paper we propose segmenting the measurement signal of single sweep and conducting Chirp Z transform to calculate target distance at different times. Compared with FFT algorithm, Chirp Z transform can achieve arbitrary narrow band spectrum subdivision, with the advantages of high accuracy and fast frequency measurement. Lastly, the Chirp Z ranging result is further combined with the method of Kalman filter to estimate the state of the target distance information. The experimental results indicate that the measurement standard is reduced from 185.4 μm to 9 μm by the proposed method. Without changing the absolute distance measuring device of broadband laser frequency scanning interferometer, this method provides a solution for further improving the ranging accuracy in the vibration environment, and reduces the complexity and cost of the device.
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