Determining the Phase and Amplitude Distortion of a Wavefront using a Plenoptic Sensor
Chensheng Wu, Jonathan Ko, Christopher C. Davis

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel plenoptic sensor capable of continuous phase reconstruction and ambiguity reduction, enabling improved wavefront measurement for adaptive optics in atmospheric turbulence conditions.
Contribution
The paper presents a new plenoptic sensor design and reconstruction algorithm that accurately measures phase and amplitude changes, overcoming limitations of traditional sensors.
Findings
Successfully reconstructs continuous wavefront phase up to multiple of 2pi.
Reduces ambiguities caused by interference and low intensity.
Demonstrates effective wavefront reconstruction in atmospheric turbulence simulations.
Abstract
We have designed a plenoptic sensor to retrieve phase and amplitude changes resulting from a laser beam's propagation through atmospheric turbulence. Compared with the commonly restricted domain of (-pi, pi) in phase reconstruction by interferometers, the reconstructed phase obtained by the plenoptic sensors can be continuous up to a multiple of 2pi. When compared with conventional Shack-Hartmann sensors, ambiguities caused by interference or low intensity, such as branch points and branch cuts, are less likely to happen and can be adaptively avoided by our reconstruction algorithm. In the design of our plenoptic sensor, we modified the fundamental structure of a light field camera into a mini Keplerian telescope array by accurately cascading the back focal plane of its object lens with a microlens array's front focal plane and matching the numerical aperture of both components. Unlike…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Optical measurement and interference techniques · Optical Wireless Communication Technologies
