05117nam 2200613 a 450 991082609830332120200520144314.01-280-96836-297866109683670-08-047364-4(CKB)1000000000364320(EBL)288751(OCoLC)808607712(SSID)ssj0000215657(PQKBManifestationID)11166460(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000215657(PQKBWorkID)10193920(PQKB)10115729(MiAaPQ)EBC288751(Au-PeEL)EBL288751(CaPaEBR)ebr10169634(CaONFJC)MIL96836(EXLCZ)99100000000036432020030417d2003 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrOptical interferometry /by P. Hariharan2nd ed.Amsterdam ;Boston Academic Pressc20031 online resource (368 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-12-311630-9 Includes bibliographical references (p. 309-342) and index.front cover; copyright; table of contents; front matter; Preface to the First Edition; Preface to the Second Edition; body; 1. Interferometry: Its Development; 1.1 The Wave Theory of Light; 1.2 The Michelson-Morley Experiment; 1.3 Measurement of the Metre; 1.4 Optical Testing; 1.5 Coherence; 1.6 Interference Spectroscopy; 1.7 The Laser; 1.8 Electronic Techniques; 1.9 Heterodyne Techniques; 1.10 Fiber Interferometers; 1.11 Nonlinear Interferometers; 1.12 Stellar Interferometry; 1.13 Space-Time and Gravitation; 1.14 Quantum Effects; 1.15 Future Directions; 2. Two-Beam Interference2.1 Complex Representation of Light Waves2.2 Interference of Two Monochromatic Waves; 2.3 Wavefront Division; 2.4 Amplitude Division; 2.5 Localization of Fringes; 2.6 Two-Beam Interferometers; 2.7 The Michelson Interferometer; 2.8 The Mach-Zehnder Interferometer; 2.9 The Sagnac Interferometer; 2.10 Interference with White Light; 2.11 Channeled Spectra; 2.12 Achromatic Fringes; 2.13 Standing Waves; 2.14 Interferential Color Photography; 3. Coherence; 3.1 Quasi-Monochromatic Light; 3.2 Waves and Wave Groups; 3.3 Phase Velocity and Group Velocity; 3.4 The Mutual Coherence Function3.5 Spatial Coherence3.6 Temporal Coherence; 3.7 Coherence Time and Coherence Length; 3.8 Coherence in the Space-Frequency Domain; 3.9 Nonclassical Light; 3.10 Effects in Two-Beam Interferometers; 3.11 Source-Size Effects; 3.12 Spectral Bandwidth Effects; 3.13 Spectral Changes Due to Coherence; 3.14 Polarization Effects; 4. Multiple-Beam Interference; 4.1 Fringes in a Plane-Parallel Plate; 4.2 Fringes by Reflection; 4.3 Fringes of Equal Thickness; 4.4 Fringes of Equal Chromatic Order; 4.5 Fringes of Superposition; 4.6 Three-Beam Fringes; 4.7 Double-Passed Fringes; 5. Lasers5.1 Lasers for Interferometry5.2 Laser Modes; 5.3 Comparison of Laser Frequencies; 5.4 Frequency Stabilization; 5.5 Laser Beams; 6. Electronic Phase Measurements; 6.1 Photoelectric Settings; 6.2 Fringe Counting; 6.3 Heterodyne Interferometry; 6.4 Phase-Locked Interferometry; 6.5 Computer-Aided Fringe Analysis; 6.6 Phase-Shifting Interferometry; 6.7 Techniques of Phase Shifting; 6.8 Sinusoidal Phase Modulation; 7. Measurements of Length; 7.1 Line Standards; 7.2 End Standards; 7.3 The Integral Interference Order; 7.4 Exact Fractions; 7.5 The Refractive Index of Air7.6 The International Prototype Metre7.7 The 86Kr Standard; 7.8 Frequency Measurements; 7.9 The Definition of the Metre; 7.10 Length Measurements with Lasers; 7.11 Changes in Length; 7.12 Displacements; 7.13 Dynamic Angle Measurements; 8. Optical Testing; 8.1 The Fizeau Interferometer; 8.2 The Twyman-Green Interferometer; 8.3 Unequal-Path Interferometers; 8.4 Phase Unwrapping; 8.5 Analysis of Wavefront Aberrations; 8.6 Shearing Interferometers; 8.7 Grating Interferometers; 8.8 The Scatter-Plate Interferometer; 8.9 The Point-Diffraction Interferometer; 8.10 Computerized Test Methods8.11 Aspheric SurfacesWhen the first edition of ""Optical Interferometry"" was published, interferometry was regarded as a rather esoteric method of making measurements, largely confined to the laboratory. Today, however, besides its use in several fields of research, it has applications in fields as diverse as measurement of length and velocity, sensors for rotation, acceleration, vibration and electrical and magnetic fields, as well as in microscopy and nanotechnology. Most topics are discussed first at a level accessible to anyone with a basic knowledge of physical optics, then a more detailed treatmInterferometryInterferometry.535/.47/0287Hariharan P47552MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910826098303321Optical interferometry4041296UNINA