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A high spatio-temporal resolution optical pyrometer at the ORION laser facility
Author(s) -
E. Floyd,
E. T. Gumbrell,
J. Fyrth,
James J. D. Luis,
Jonathan Skidmore,
S. Patankar,
Samuel Giltrap,
R. A. Smith
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
review of scientific instruments
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.605
H-Index - 165
eISSN - 1089-7623
pISSN - 0034-6748
DOI - 10.1063/1.4962036
Subject(s) - streak camera , optics , streak , physics , pyrometer , image resolution , spectral resolution , vignetting , picosecond , calibration , temporal resolution , shutter , field of view , detector , laser , materials science , temperature measurement , spectral line , lens (geology) , quantum mechanics , astronomy
A streaked pyrometer has been designed to measure the temperature of ≈100 µm diameter heated targets in the warm dense matter region. The diagnostic has picosecond time resolution. Spatial resolution is limited by the streak camera to 4 µm in one dimension; the imaging system has superior resolution of 1 µm. High light collection efficiency means that the diagnostic can transmit a measurable quantity of thermal emission at temperatures as low as 1 eV to the detector. This is achieved through the use of an f/1.4 objective, and a minimum number of reflecting and refracting surfaces to relay the image over 8 m with no vignetting over a 0.4 mm field of view with 12.5× magnification. All the system optics are highly corrected, to allow imaging with minimal aberrations over a broad spectral range. The detector is a highly sensitive Axis Photonique streak camera with a P820PSU streak tube. For the first time, two of these cameras have been absolutely calibrated at 1 ns and 2 ns sweep speeds under full operational conditions and over 8 spectral bands between 425 nm and 650 nm using a high-stability picosecond white light source. Over this range the cameras had a response which varied between 47 ± 8 and 14 ± 4 photons/count. The calibration of the optical imaging system makes absolute temperature measurements possible. Color temperature measurements are also possible due to the wide spectral range over which the system is calibrated; two different spectral bands can be imaged onto different parts of the photocathode of the same streak camera

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