
Interferometric stitching method for testing cylindrical surfaces with large apertures
Author(s) -
Shuai Xue,
Yifan Dai,
Shengyue Zeng,
Shanyong Chen,
Ye Tian,
Feng Shi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.428713
Subject(s) - image stitching , optics , interferometry , aperture (computer memory) , laser , materials science , rotation (mathematics) , holography , computer science , physics , acoustics , artificial intelligence
Cylindrical surfaces widely used in high-energy laser systems can have nearly semi-meter-scale dimensions, and aperture angles can exceed R/3. State-of-the-art interferometric stitching test methods involve stitching only along the arc direction, and the reported dimensions of ∼50 × 50 mm 2 are far smaller than those required in high-energy laser systems. To rectify this limitation, an interferometric stitching method for cylindrical surfaces with large apertures is proposed. Moreover, a subaperture stitching algorithm that can stitch along both the linear and arc directions is developed. An interferometric stitching workstation equipped with a six-axis motion stage and a series of computer-generated holograms is established, where cylindrical surfaces with R/# values as large as R/0.5 and apertures up to 700 mm can be tested based on the theoretical analysis. A convex cylindrical surface with a 350 × 380 mm 2 aperture is tested to validate the proposed method's feasibility in enlarging the testable aperture of cylindrical surfaces significantly from Ф50 mm to Ф700 mm, thereby promoting the application of large cylindrical surfaces in high-energy laser systems.