Paper
13 May 2013 Measurement of aspheres and free-form surfaces in a non-null test interferometer: reconstruction of high-frequency errors
Goran Baer, Johannes Schindler, Jens Siepmann, Christof Pruß, Wolfgang Osten, Michael Schulz
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Abstract
The tilted wave interferometer is a non-null test interferometer for the measurement of aspheres and freeform surfaces without dedicated null-optics that uses an array of tilted waves to locally compensate the deviation of the surface from the spherical form. The concept allows for short measurement times of only a few minutes and high lateral resolutions at the same time. The calculation of the surface error is performed by perturbation of a polynomial representation of the surface. Since we are also interested in higher frequency errors of the surface which cannot be described by a polynomial of finite order these errors are evaluated in an additional step. Since every wavefront only covers a small area of the surface the challenge here is to reconstruct the surface from the information that is distributed over the different patches. We will present the method that was developed for the reconstruction of these high frequency errors as well as measurement results of aspheres and freeform surfaces without rotational symmetry that were obtained by this method.
© (2013) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Goran Baer, Johannes Schindler, Jens Siepmann, Christof Pruß, Wolfgang Osten, and Michael Schulz "Measurement of aspheres and free-form surfaces in a non-null test interferometer: reconstruction of high-frequency errors", Proc. SPIE 8788, Optical Measurement Systems for Industrial Inspection VIII, 878818 (13 May 2013); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2021518
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Cited by 7 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Interferometers

Aspheric lenses

Wavefronts

Spherical lenses

Optical spheres

Calibration

Beam splitters

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