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1.
Appl Opt ; 40(22): 3640-8, 2001 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18360393

ABSTRACT

We present the concept of principal sections of a lightpipe to analyze the propagation of light through the lightpipe by total internal reflection. Only the principal sections determine the acceptance angle and thus help in the identification of regions where the leakage occurs first. Use of principal sections for analysis leads to a significant reduction in the design effort. We present an analysis of several commonly used lightpipe configurations, e.g., straight and single circular bend, and different cross sections, e.g., elliptical and rectangular. This analysis leads to the maximization of throughput and transfer efficiency. The uniformity characteristics of elementary configurations and scaling factors for a lightpipe with a single circular bend are also discussed.

2.
Appl Opt ; 32(9): 1517-27, 1993 Mar 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20820281

ABSTRACT

We investigate the absorption distribution in a cylindrical gain medium that is pumped by a source of distributed laser diodes by means of a pump cavity developed from the edge-ray principle of nonimaging optics. The performance of this pumping arrangement is studied by using a nonsequential, numerical, three-dimensional ray-tracing scheme. A figure of merit is defined for the pump cavities that takes into account the coupling efficiency and uniformity of the absorption distribution. It is found that the nonimaging pump cavity maintains a high coupling efficiency with extended two-dimensional diode arrays and obtains a fairly uniform absorption distribution. The nonimaging cavity is compared with two other designs: a close-coupled side-pumped cavity and an imaging design in the form of a elliptical cavity. The nonimaging cavity has a better figure of merit per diode than these two designs. It also permits the use of an extended, sparse, two-dimensional diode array, which reduces thermal loading of the source and eliminates all cavity optics other than the main reflector.

3.
Vision Res ; 32(2): 323-33, 1992 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1574848

ABSTRACT

We measured the time course of light adaptation in foveal vision following the onset of an adapting background. Several adaptational steps in the low to mid photopic range were examined. The time course of multiplicative and subtractive components of the adaptation were extracted from the data. Unlike previous findings there were no subtractive changes for several hundred milliseconds following light onset, and the process took 10-15 sec to reach steady state. It seems likely that the fast component previously observed results from effectively instantaneous center-surround antagonism, and that our measurements reflect a second subtractive process involving the slow loss of the d.c. signal over time.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Ocular/physiology , Dark Adaptation/physiology , Fovea Centralis/physiology , Humans , Light , Mathematics , Photometry , Sensory Thresholds/physiology , Time Factors
4.
Appl Opt ; 29(28): 4008-15, 1990 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20577337

ABSTRACT

This study investigates the role of gradient-index materials in the design of Cooke triplets for use as 35-mm format photographic objectives. Cooke triplet designs are presented with different types of gradient-index profiles. Both linear axial and shallow radial gradients are shown to provide effective control of spherical aberration and astigmatism. In particular, a Cooke triplet with a combination of both linear axial and radial gradients attains performance comparable to a six-element double Gauss lens. In virtually all cases, the use of gradient-index components improves the Cooke triplets' performance significantly.

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