SPECKLE MEASUREMENTS WITH A CCD ARRAY: APPLICATIONS TO SPECKLE REDUCTION.

Speckle noise is an integral part of any laser projection display because it is the nature of laser (coherent) illumination to form interference patterns with high visibility. The granularity of the image due to the speckle formed on the viewer's retina degrades the image quality, thus stimulat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: EICHEN, ELLIOT GENE.
Other Authors: Wyant, Jim
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1982
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184904
id ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-184904
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1849042015-10-23T04:30:29Z SPECKLE MEASUREMENTS WITH A CCD ARRAY: APPLICATIONS TO SPECKLE REDUCTION. EICHEN, ELLIOT GENE. Wyant, Jim Laser speckle. Speckle metrology. Charge coupled devices. Speckle noise is an integral part of any laser projection display because it is the nature of laser (coherent) illumination to form interference patterns with high visibility. The granularity of the image due to the speckle formed on the viewer's retina degrades the image quality, thus stimulating the need for speckle reduction techniques applied to laser displays. An instrument to measure image plane speckle contrast was built based on a linear CCD detector array interfaced to an LSI-11 microcomputer. Speckle reduction techniques were then evaluated by comparing the contrast obtained with each method. The effect of the spatial frequency response (MTF) on the measured contrast was studied, along with the statistical significance of the measurement which is limited by the finite sample space of 1024 detector pixels per CCD frame. The lowering of the contrast due to the array MTF can be minimized by working at extremely high F numbers (> 100). The sample space can be widened by taking more than one frame of data and treating all the frames as a single data set. Techniques to reduce speckle noise in laser displays fall into two broad categories: reducing the coherence of light forming the speckle, and incoherently adding multiple uncorrelated (or partially correlated) speckle patterns. The first technique (effective only for monochromatic displays) was implemented by coating a screen with various dyes, phosphors, or fluorescent paints. Using the 514 nm line from an Argon laser, the contrast can be reduced by almost 30% by spraying a thin layer of fluorescent paint on the screen. More speckle reduction can be achieved with an accompanying loss in image brightness. The second technique involved creating a multiplicity of partially correlated speckle patterns that appear from the same position on the screen over the integration period of the eye. The different speckle patterns are produced by changing the angle of illumination while keeping a portion of the laser spot focused on the same point on the screen. The scan angle method (applicable to multi-color displays), can be implemented by properly synchronizing an acousto-optic modulator with the scan optics, and imaging the modulator on the screen. Using a beaded screen and a reasonable laser dither of 10 millirads, the contrast can be reduced by half. 1982 text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184904 681955873 8217407 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Laser speckle.
Speckle metrology.
Charge coupled devices.
spellingShingle Laser speckle.
Speckle metrology.
Charge coupled devices.
EICHEN, ELLIOT GENE.
SPECKLE MEASUREMENTS WITH A CCD ARRAY: APPLICATIONS TO SPECKLE REDUCTION.
description Speckle noise is an integral part of any laser projection display because it is the nature of laser (coherent) illumination to form interference patterns with high visibility. The granularity of the image due to the speckle formed on the viewer's retina degrades the image quality, thus stimulating the need for speckle reduction techniques applied to laser displays. An instrument to measure image plane speckle contrast was built based on a linear CCD detector array interfaced to an LSI-11 microcomputer. Speckle reduction techniques were then evaluated by comparing the contrast obtained with each method. The effect of the spatial frequency response (MTF) on the measured contrast was studied, along with the statistical significance of the measurement which is limited by the finite sample space of 1024 detector pixels per CCD frame. The lowering of the contrast due to the array MTF can be minimized by working at extremely high F numbers (> 100). The sample space can be widened by taking more than one frame of data and treating all the frames as a single data set. Techniques to reduce speckle noise in laser displays fall into two broad categories: reducing the coherence of light forming the speckle, and incoherently adding multiple uncorrelated (or partially correlated) speckle patterns. The first technique (effective only for monochromatic displays) was implemented by coating a screen with various dyes, phosphors, or fluorescent paints. Using the 514 nm line from an Argon laser, the contrast can be reduced by almost 30% by spraying a thin layer of fluorescent paint on the screen. More speckle reduction can be achieved with an accompanying loss in image brightness. The second technique involved creating a multiplicity of partially correlated speckle patterns that appear from the same position on the screen over the integration period of the eye. The different speckle patterns are produced by changing the angle of illumination while keeping a portion of the laser spot focused on the same point on the screen. The scan angle method (applicable to multi-color displays), can be implemented by properly synchronizing an acousto-optic modulator with the scan optics, and imaging the modulator on the screen. Using a beaded screen and a reasonable laser dither of 10 millirads, the contrast can be reduced by half.
author2 Wyant, Jim
author_facet Wyant, Jim
EICHEN, ELLIOT GENE.
author EICHEN, ELLIOT GENE.
author_sort EICHEN, ELLIOT GENE.
title SPECKLE MEASUREMENTS WITH A CCD ARRAY: APPLICATIONS TO SPECKLE REDUCTION.
title_short SPECKLE MEASUREMENTS WITH A CCD ARRAY: APPLICATIONS TO SPECKLE REDUCTION.
title_full SPECKLE MEASUREMENTS WITH A CCD ARRAY: APPLICATIONS TO SPECKLE REDUCTION.
title_fullStr SPECKLE MEASUREMENTS WITH A CCD ARRAY: APPLICATIONS TO SPECKLE REDUCTION.
title_full_unstemmed SPECKLE MEASUREMENTS WITH A CCD ARRAY: APPLICATIONS TO SPECKLE REDUCTION.
title_sort speckle measurements with a ccd array: applications to speckle reduction.
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1982
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184904
work_keys_str_mv AT eichenelliotgene specklemeasurementswithaccdarrayapplicationstospecklereduction
_version_ 1718097491147096064