USH1979H1 - Electronic streak camera - Google Patents

Electronic streak camera Download PDF

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Publication number
USH1979H1
USH1979H1 US09/148,910 US14891098A USH1979H US H1979 H1 USH1979 H1 US H1979H1 US 14891098 A US14891098 A US 14891098A US H1979 H USH1979 H US H1979H
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radiation
streak camera
lens
optical
collimating
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US09/148,910
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Mark F. Hopkins
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US Air Force
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01JMEASUREMENT OF INTENSITY, VELOCITY, SPECTRAL CONTENT, POLARISATION, PHASE OR PULSE CHARACTERISTICS OF INFRARED, VISIBLE OR ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT; COLORIMETRY; RADIATION PYROMETRY
    • G01J5/00Radiation pyrometry, e.g. infrared or optical thermometry
    • G01J5/60Radiation pyrometry, e.g. infrared or optical thermometry using determination of colour temperature
    • G01J5/601Radiation pyrometry, e.g. infrared or optical thermometry using determination of colour temperature using spectral scanning

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  • the present invention relates generally to electronic streak camera structures, and more particularly to an electronic streak camera structure having no moving parts for accurate imaging of high speed transient events.
  • the invention solves or substantially reduces in critical importance problems with conventional streak camera structures by providing a streak camera including a spectrometer having no moving parts for use in recording high speed transient events.
  • the camera of the invention is characterized by low noise and low cost of operation, provides improved light efficiency (two orders of magnitude) and greater light collecting capability (f/2 vs f/20) compared to conventional streak camera structures, and permits temperature determinations accurately for highly dynamic test events such as internal combustion in engines, materials deformation in hot metal processing and detonating or deflagrating explosives, including measurements at very high rates of temperature change (hundreds of degrees per millisecond).
  • optical shall, in accord with customary usage, be defined herein to include only ultraviolet, visible, near infrared, mid-infrared and far infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum lying between about 0.1 to about 1000 microns (see, e.g., Optical Physics , Max Garbuny, Academic Press, NY, 1965, pp 1-6), and more specifically to the range of from about 0.2 micron, the approximate lower limit of operation of fine quality quartz lenses (Garbuny, p 280), to about 50 microns, the approximate upper limit of operation of long wavelength transmitting material such as thallium bromide-iodide ionic crystal (Garbuny, p 282).
  • an electronic streak camera which includes a housing enclosing an objective lens disposed along an optical axis for forming an image of optical radiation from an emissive body, a pinhole field stop at the focal point of the objective lens, a collimating lens for collimating radiation passing the pinhole field stop, a prism for splitting the radiation from the collimating lens into a characteristic optical spectrum of the radiation, an imaging lens for forming an image of the radiation from the prism.
  • Objective lens 11 is disposed within an opening in a wall of housing 12 , lens 11 being selected in size and focal length for forming an image of radiation 13 passing along optical axis O from an emissive body 14 onto pinhole field stop 15 disposed within housing 12 substantially as shown in the drawing. Radiation passing through pinhole 15 is collimated by lens 17 and split into its characteristic spectrum 19 by prism 20 . Lens 21 then images spectrum 19 onto detector array 23 disposed at the focal plane of lens 21 .
  • Housing 10 may be of any suitable structure for enclosing camera 10 constituent elements.
  • Detector array 23 may comprise any suitable detector system such as a CCD array or other charge transfer detector system, the same not considered limiting of the invention. Scanning is achieved by clocking the line image of the array to the adjacent row, which no optical energy from the object reaches.
  • ⁇ eff ( ⁇ ) a M+1 ⁇ M +a M ⁇ M ⁇ 1 +a M ⁇ 1 ⁇ M ⁇ 2 + . . . +a 1 (1)
  • the constants describe emissivity behavior. If, for example, a material has an emissivity that does not change with wavelength (graybody), only a 1 need be determined because all other constants are zero. Consequently, only two spectral measurements are necessary to form two equations for the two unknowns (a 1 and temperature T). If an M th degree polynomial provides an accurate fit to a given material emissivity profile, there will be M coefficients, a M+1 . . .a 2 , of wavelength that will be unknown. With a 1 and T unknown, a minimum of M+2 spectral measurements are required.
  • n is the number of spectral regions
  • c the velocity of light
  • h is Planck's constant
  • k the Boltzmann constant
  • ⁇ a ( ⁇ ) the transmission of the atmosphere
  • ⁇ o ( ⁇ ) the transmission of the optics
  • R d ( ⁇ ) the responsivity of the detector
  • a 0 the area of the optics.
  • the system of equations generated from the multi-spectral measurements is nonlinear because of terms associated with the Planck distribution, and a nonlinear regression optimization technique is therefore required.
  • the equations can be made linear by holding temperature constant and obtaining a solution and an error function establishing accuracy of the predicted temperature. A regression through temperature gives the correct temperature at the minimum error function. It is important therefore to represent the emissivity as a linear function. For purposes of the linear solution technique, emissivity will be assumed to fit a second order polynomial functional form.
  • the linear solution technique uses Gaussian elimination to find a solution to the system of four equations constructed from four spectral measurements.
  • the invention therefore provides an electronic streak camera having no moving parts for the accurate imaging of high-speed transient events. It is understood that modifications to the invention may be made as might occur to one with skill in the field of the invention, within the scope of the appended claims. All embodiments contemplated hereunder that achieve the objects of the invention have therefore not been shown in complete detail. Other embodiments may be developed without departing from the spirit of the invention or from the scope of the appended claims.

Abstract

An electronic streak camera is described which includes a housing enclosing an objective lens disposed along an optical axis for forming an image of optical radiation from an emissive body, a pinhole field stop at the focal point of the objective lens, a collimating lens for collimating radiation passing the pinhole field stop, a prism for splitting the radiation from the collimating lens into a characteristic optical spectrum of the radiation, an imaging lens for forming an image of the radiation from the prism.

Description

RIGHTS OF THE GOVERNMENT
The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States for all governmental purposes without the payment of any royalty.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to electronic streak camera structures, and more particularly to an electronic streak camera structure having no moving parts for accurate imaging of high speed transient events.
Conventional streak camera systems for measuring temperature of energetic environments have been substantially dominated by system noise, the primary effect of which is that energy gathered for in each measured wavelength is somewhat higher or lower than true readings. In a conventional streak camera, a mirror is rotated in the pupil of the optical system to separate time events onto a fixed focal plane. A prism or diffraction grating is typically used to disperse the optical energy onto a detector. Mechanical jitter of the rotating mirror inherently introduces error into the measurements. Additionally, conventional streak cameras are light-inefficient and are typically ten stops lower than a standard electronic camera, reducing the amount of light collected by a factor of 100 or more. To amplify the light, photomultiplier tubes or multi-channel plates are used, which introduce substantial additional noise. Only general radiative characteristics can be obtained with these systems because of the limited signal-to-noise performance.
The invention solves or substantially reduces in critical importance problems with conventional streak camera structures by providing a streak camera including a spectrometer having no moving parts for use in recording high speed transient events. The camera of the invention is characterized by low noise and low cost of operation, provides improved light efficiency (two orders of magnitude) and greater light collecting capability (f/2 vs f/20) compared to conventional streak camera structures, and permits temperature determinations accurately for highly dynamic test events such as internal combustion in engines, materials deformation in hot metal processing and detonating or deflagrating explosives, including measurements at very high rates of temperature change (hundreds of degrees per millisecond).
For the purpose of describing the invention and defining the scope thereof, the term “optical” shall, in accord with customary usage, be defined herein to include only ultraviolet, visible, near infrared, mid-infrared and far infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum lying between about 0.1 to about 1000 microns (see, e.g., Optical Physics, Max Garbuny, Academic Press, NY, 1965, pp 1-6), and more specifically to the range of from about 0.2 micron, the approximate lower limit of operation of fine quality quartz lenses (Garbuny, p 280), to about 50 microns, the approximate upper limit of operation of long wavelength transmitting material such as thallium bromide-iodide ionic crystal (Garbuny, p 282).
It is therefore a principal object of the invention to provide an electronic streak camera.
It is another object of the invention to provide an electronic streak camera for use in high-speed pyrometry of energetic materials.
It is a further object of the invention to provide an electronic streak camera having no moving parts.
It is a further object of the invention to provide an electronic streak camera for acquiring temperature data on explosive materials.
It is yet another object of the invention to provide an electronic streak camera for acquiring temperature data at high rates of temperature change.
These and other objects of the invention will become apparent as a detailed description of representative embodiments proceeds.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with foregoing principles and object of the invention, an electronic streak camera is described which includes a housing enclosing an objective lens disposed along an optical axis for forming an image of optical radiation from an emissive body, a pinhole field stop at the focal point of the objective lens, a collimating lens for collimating radiation passing the pinhole field stop, a prism for splitting the radiation from the collimating lens into a characteristic optical spectrum of the radiation, an imaging lens for forming an image of the radiation from the prism.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
The invention will be more clearly understood from the following detailed description of representative embodiments thereof read in conjunction with the accompanying schematic drawing illustrating a representative electronic streak camera structure according to the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Referring now to the drawing, shown therein is a schematic illustration of a representative electronic streak camera 10 structure of the invention. Objective lens 11 is disposed within an opening in a wall of housing 12, lens 11 being selected in size and focal length for forming an image of radiation 13 passing along optical axis O from an emissive body 14 onto pinhole field stop 15 disposed within housing 12 substantially as shown in the drawing. Radiation passing through pinhole 15 is collimated by lens 17 and split into its characteristic spectrum 19 by prism 20. Lens 21 then images spectrum 19 onto detector array 23 disposed at the focal plane of lens 21. Housing 10 may be of any suitable structure for enclosing camera 10 constituent elements. Detector array 23 may comprise any suitable detector system such as a CCD array or other charge transfer detector system, the same not considered limiting of the invention. Scanning is achieved by clocking the line image of the array to the adjacent row, which no optical energy from the object reaches.
Using the formula for the characteristic radiation of a material (usually a Planck distribution) total radiation from the material can be found by multiplying this formula by the surface emissivity. Multiple spectral measurements can be used to determine temperature when the radiation formula is a function of temperature and wavelength. However, using a camera to collect the spectrum has often been based on assumptions that lead to erroneous results, primarily because of the uncertainty in the collected optical energy. Emissivity, atmospheric transmission, detector non-linearity, etc. can all affect the amount of energy collected, depending on wavelength and bandwidth at which the measurement is made. The problem may be reduced to an uncertainty in emissivity (see e.g., Methods of Optical Polychromatic Pyrometry, V. N. Snopko, Plenum Publishing Co. (1988) pp 724-729). Emissivity can be characterized with an Mth degree polynomial in wavelength by
εeff(λ)=a M+1λM +a MλM−1 +a M−1λM−2 + . . . +a 1  (1)
where the constants describe emissivity behavior. If, for example, a material has an emissivity that does not change with wavelength (graybody), only a1 need be determined because all other constants are zero. Consequently, only two spectral measurements are necessary to form two equations for the two unknowns (a1 and temperature T). If an Mth degree polynomial provides an accurate fit to a given material emissivity profile, there will be M coefficients, aM+1 . . .a2, of wavelength that will be unknown. With a1 and T unknown, a minimum of M+2 spectral measurements are required.
Equations constructed from the multispectral regions of the pyrometer data are: Φ i = λ i m i n λ i m a x c 1 λ 5 ( c 2 λ T - 1 ) ɛ ( λ ) τ a ( λ ) τ o ( λ ) R d ( λ ) A o Ω λ for i = 1 to n , ( 2 )
Figure USH0001979-20010807-M00001
where n is the number of spectral regions, c the velocity of light, h is Planck's constant, k the Boltzmann constant, τa(λ) the transmission of the atmosphere, τo(λ) the transmission of the optics, Rd(λ) the responsivity of the detector and A0 the area of the optics. Solving Eqs (2) will separate the coupled response of temperature and emissivity.
System parameters such as detector response and solid angle are known quantities after system calibration and can be represented as a single function Ri(λ). Transmission terms of Eq (2) can be folded into Ri(λ) for simplicity. The power on the detector Eq (2) can be rewritten as Φ i = λ i m i n λ i m a x c 1 λ 5 ( c 2 λ T - 1 ) ɛ ( λ i ) R i ( λ ) λ for i = 1 to n , ( 3 )
Figure USH0001979-20010807-M00002
The system of equations generated from the multi-spectral measurements is nonlinear because of terms associated with the Planck distribution, and a nonlinear regression optimization technique is therefore required. The equations can be made linear by holding temperature constant and obtaining a solution and an error function establishing accuracy of the predicted temperature. A regression through temperature gives the correct temperature at the minimum error function. It is important therefore to represent the emissivity as a linear function. For purposes of the linear solution technique, emissivity will be assumed to fit a second order polynomial functional form.
The linear solution technique uses Gaussian elimination to find a solution to the system of four equations constructed from four spectral measurements. With a second degree polynomial as the model for emissivity, the four equation setup by the four color pyrometer are: Φ λ i = λ i m i n λ i m a x c 1 ( a 1 λ 2 + a 2 λ + a 3 ) λ 5 ( c 2 λ T - 1 ) Re i ( λ ) λ for i = 1 to 4 ( 4 )
Figure USH0001979-20010807-M00003
Rearranging terms, Eq (4) becomes Φ λ i = a 1 λ i m i n λ i m a x c 1 R i ( λ ) λ λ 3 ( c 2 λ T - 1 ) + a 2 λ i m i n λ i m a x c 1 R i ( λ ) λ λ 4 ( c 2 λ T - 1 ) + a 3 λ i m i n λ i m a x c 1 R i ( λ ) λ λ 5 ( c 2 λ T - 1 ) for i = 1 to 4 ( 5 )
Figure USH0001979-20010807-M00004
At constant temperature three of the four Eqs (5) have linear solutions and can be written as, Φ λ i = a 1 λ i m i n λ i m a x c 1 ( T ) R i ( λ ) λ λ 3 + a 2 λ i m i n λ i m a x c 2 ( T ) R i ( λ ) λ λ 4 + a 3 λ i m i n λ i m a x c 3 ( T ) R i ( λ ) λ λ 5 for i = 1 to 3 ( 6 )
Figure USH0001979-20010807-M00005
Each of the integrals of Eq (6) can be evaluated,
Φλ 1 =a 1 I 1 i (T)+a 2 I 2 i (T)+a 3 I 3 i (T) for i=1 to 3   (7)
or can be rewritten in linear algebra form as [ Φ λ 1 Φ λ 2 Φ λ 3 ] = [ I 1 1 ( T ) I 2 1 ( T ) I 3 1 ( T ) I 1 2 ( T ) I 2 2 ( T ) I 3 2 ( T ) I 1 3 ( T ) I 2 3 ( T ) I 3 3 ( T ) ] · [ a 1 a 2 a 3 ] ( 8 )
Figure USH0001979-20010807-M00006
The solution for the unknown emissivity coefficients a1, a2 and a3 is [ a 1 a 2 a 3 ] · [ I 1 1 ( T ) I 2 1 ( T ) I 3 1 ( T ) I 1 2 ( T ) I 2 2 ( T ) I 3 2 ( T ) I 1 3 ( T ) I 2 3 ( T ) I 3 3 ( T ) ] - 1 · [ Φ λ 1 Φ λ 2 Φ λ 3 ] ( 9 )
Figure USH0001979-20010807-M00007
Using Gaussian elimination, the coefficients can be determined and substituted into the fourth equation. If there is no error in Eq (9), the assumed temperature was correct, otherwise the temperature assumption needs to be changed and the coefficients recomputed.
The teachings of all references cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference herein.
The invention therefore provides an electronic streak camera having no moving parts for the accurate imaging of high-speed transient events. It is understood that modifications to the invention may be made as might occur to one with skill in the field of the invention, within the scope of the appended claims. All embodiments contemplated hereunder that achieve the objects of the invention have therefore not been shown in complete detail. Other embodiments may be developed without departing from the spirit of the invention or from the scope of the appended claims.

Claims (2)

I claim:
1. An electronic streak camera, comprising:
(a) a housing;
(b) a first objective lens disposed along an optical axis within an opening in a wall of said housing for forming an image of optical radiation passing along said optical axis from an emissive body;
(c) a pinhole field stop disposed along said optical axis at the focal point of said objective lens;
(d) a second collimating lens disposed along said optical axis for collimating radiation passing said pinhole field stop;
(c) a prism for splitting said radiation from said collimating lens into a characteristic optical spectrum of said radiation; and
(e) a third imaging lens for forming an image of said radiation from said prism;
(f) a detector array disposed at the focal plane of said third imaging lens for detecting said characteristic spectrum of said radiation.
2. The electronic streak camera of claim 1 wherein said detector array is a CCD array.
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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20140367558A1 (en) * 2013-06-18 2014-12-18 Massachusetts Institute Of Technology Methods and Apparatus for High Speed Camera
US20200278302A1 (en) * 2017-10-11 2020-09-03 Krones Ag Apparatus for inspecting containers, in particular cans

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4769552A (en) 1986-01-24 1988-09-06 Thomson-Csf System for high speed reading of a charge transfer matrix optical sensor organized with one stroke frame transfer for the video detection of brief images
US5101100A (en) 1989-12-01 1992-03-31 Hamamatsu Photonics K.K. Streak camera operable with low deflection voltage
US5144374A (en) 1990-04-27 1992-09-01 Cselt - Centro Studi E Laboratori Telecommunicazioni S.P.A. Optical spectroscopy system
US5221836A (en) 1990-09-07 1993-06-22 Hamamatsu Photonics K.K. Streak tube having an arrangement for suppressing travel time spread of photoelectrons
US5278403A (en) 1991-04-29 1994-01-11 Alfano Robert R Femtosecond streak camera
US5394237A (en) * 1992-11-10 1995-02-28 Geophysical & Enviromental Research Corp. Portable multiband imaging spectrometer
US5424827A (en) * 1993-04-30 1995-06-13 Litton Systems, Inc. Optical system and method for eliminating overlap of diffraction spectra
US5504575A (en) * 1991-12-20 1996-04-02 Texas Instruments Incorporated SLM spectrometer
US5636050A (en) * 1994-02-15 1997-06-03 Research Foundation Of City College Of New York Apparatus using optical deflection

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4769552A (en) 1986-01-24 1988-09-06 Thomson-Csf System for high speed reading of a charge transfer matrix optical sensor organized with one stroke frame transfer for the video detection of brief images
US5101100A (en) 1989-12-01 1992-03-31 Hamamatsu Photonics K.K. Streak camera operable with low deflection voltage
US5144374A (en) 1990-04-27 1992-09-01 Cselt - Centro Studi E Laboratori Telecommunicazioni S.P.A. Optical spectroscopy system
US5221836A (en) 1990-09-07 1993-06-22 Hamamatsu Photonics K.K. Streak tube having an arrangement for suppressing travel time spread of photoelectrons
US5278403A (en) 1991-04-29 1994-01-11 Alfano Robert R Femtosecond streak camera
US5504575A (en) * 1991-12-20 1996-04-02 Texas Instruments Incorporated SLM spectrometer
US5394237A (en) * 1992-11-10 1995-02-28 Geophysical & Enviromental Research Corp. Portable multiband imaging spectrometer
US5424827A (en) * 1993-04-30 1995-06-13 Litton Systems, Inc. Optical system and method for eliminating overlap of diffraction spectra
US5636050A (en) * 1994-02-15 1997-06-03 Research Foundation Of City College Of New York Apparatus using optical deflection

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20140367558A1 (en) * 2013-06-18 2014-12-18 Massachusetts Institute Of Technology Methods and Apparatus for High Speed Camera
US9451177B2 (en) * 2013-06-18 2016-09-20 Massachusetts Institute Of Technology Methods and apparatus for high speed camera
US20200278302A1 (en) * 2017-10-11 2020-09-03 Krones Ag Apparatus for inspecting containers, in particular cans
US11614411B2 (en) * 2017-10-11 2023-03-28 Krones Ag Apparatus for inspecting containers, in particular cans

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