The optical fractional Fourier transform (OFRT) in combination with speckle photography has previously been used to measure the magnitude of surface tilting and translation. Previous OFRT techniques used to determine motion have not been able to discern the direction of the tilt and translation. A simple new approach involving use of correlation is presented to overcome this limitation. Controlled variation of the minimum resolution and dynamical range of measurement is demonstrated. It is then experimentally confirmed that if a rigid body·s motion is captured by two OFRT systems of different orders, the direction and magnitude of both the tilting and the in-plane translation motion of the body can be independently determined without a prio...
Abstract. Phase correlation techniques have been used in image registration to estimate image displa...
The statistical properties of speckles in paraxial optical systems depend on the system parameters. ...
10.1117/12.853632Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering7718-PSIS
The optical fractional Fourier transform (OFRT) in combination with speckle photography has previous...
It is shown that both surface tilting and translational motion can be independently estimated by use...
Digital speckle photography can be used in the analysis of surface motion in combination with an opt...
It is shown that both surface tilting and translational motion can be independently estimated by use...
A reflection-based optical implementation of two simultaneous scale-invariant fractional Fourier tra...
A reflection-based optical implementation of two simultaneous scale-invariant fractional Fourier tran...
The fractional Fourier transform (FRT) is shown to be of potential use in analyzing the motion of a ...
The theoretical and numerical analysis in this work show that both surface tilting and translational...
A common problem in experimental mechanics is that when a sample is studied in e.g. a tensile test m...
Most of the holographic techniques applied so far for non-contacting measurements of surface displac...
Digital speckle correlation techniques have already been successfully proven to ...
32-36Measurement of lateral and axial displacements of an object using digital processing of speckle...
Abstract. Phase correlation techniques have been used in image registration to estimate image displa...
The statistical properties of speckles in paraxial optical systems depend on the system parameters. ...
10.1117/12.853632Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering7718-PSIS
The optical fractional Fourier transform (OFRT) in combination with speckle photography has previous...
It is shown that both surface tilting and translational motion can be independently estimated by use...
Digital speckle photography can be used in the analysis of surface motion in combination with an opt...
It is shown that both surface tilting and translational motion can be independently estimated by use...
A reflection-based optical implementation of two simultaneous scale-invariant fractional Fourier tra...
A reflection-based optical implementation of two simultaneous scale-invariant fractional Fourier tran...
The fractional Fourier transform (FRT) is shown to be of potential use in analyzing the motion of a ...
The theoretical and numerical analysis in this work show that both surface tilting and translational...
A common problem in experimental mechanics is that when a sample is studied in e.g. a tensile test m...
Most of the holographic techniques applied so far for non-contacting measurements of surface displac...
Digital speckle correlation techniques have already been successfully proven to ...
32-36Measurement of lateral and axial displacements of an object using digital processing of speckle...
Abstract. Phase correlation techniques have been used in image registration to estimate image displa...
The statistical properties of speckles in paraxial optical systems depend on the system parameters. ...
10.1117/12.853632Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering7718-PSIS