Holographic Measurement of Surface Topography: Limits and New Options

Institute of Optics, University of Erlangen;
2Wyant College for Optical Sciences, University of Arizona

gerd.haeusler@fau.de

Abstract

Holograms offer a vast realm for optical 3D metrology. Even more so with the progress of digital holography: After digital storage of a complex wave-field, any kind of post-processing can be performed, any optical instrument (already invented or not yet invented) can be mimicked. A view over the fence: Processing of complex radio-signals allows for satellite 3D-radar with cm resolution, for 1000 km large radio telescopes - and black hole “imaging” by (IR) aperture synthesis. Whatever ’computational-optics’ has in-store, it is the physical signal arriving at the camera-chip that will determine and fundamentally limit the final outcome. We discuss the origin of the ultimate uncertainty limits for holographic methods. Physics suggests that there are similarities to non-holographic concepts, but due to the virtually unlimited post processing options, we can sidestep some technical limitations. Even established sensors can be improved via ‘holography+computation’ and novel sensor concepts become possible, such as imaging hidden objects around corners and through scattering media. G. Häusler, F. Willomitzer, Light: Advanced Manufacturing 3, Article number 5 (2022)

Keywords

Theoretische Grundlagen 3D-Messtechnik Holografie
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@inproceedings{dgao124-b13, title = {Holographic Measurement of Surface Topography: Limits and New Options}, author = {G. Häusler, F. Willomitzer}, booktitle = {DGaO-Proceedings, 124. Jahrestagung}, year = {2023}, publisher = {Deutsche Gesellschaft für angewandte Optik e.V.}, issn = {1614-8436}, note = {Vortrag B13} }
124. Jahrestagung der DGaO · Berlin · 2023