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1.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 85(11): 11D855, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25430268

ABSTRACT

An imaging system with a wide-angle tangential view of the full poloidal cross-section of the tokamak in simultaneous infrared and visible light has been installed on DIII-D. The optical train includes three polished stainless steel mirrors in vacuum, which view the tokamak through an aperture in the first mirror, similar to the design concept proposed for ITER. A dichroic beam splitter outside the vacuum separates visible and infrared (IR) light. Spatial calibration is accomplished by warping a CAD-rendered image to align with landmarks in a data image. The IR camera provides scrape-off layer heat flux profile deposition features in diverted and inner-wall-limited plasmas, such as heat flux reduction in pumped radiative divertor shots. Demonstration of the system to date includes observation of fast-ion losses to the outer wall during neutral beam injection, and shows reduced peak wall heat loading with disruption mitigation by injection of a massive gas puff.

2.
Appl Opt ; 39(25): 4540-6, 2000 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18350042

ABSTRACT

We performed a direct side-by-side comparison of a Shack-Hartmann wave-front sensor and a phase-shifting interferometer for the purpose of characterizing large optics. An expansion telescope of our own design allowed us to measure the surface figure of a 400-mm-square mirror with both instruments simultaneously. The Shack-Hartmann sensor produced data that closely matched the interferometer data over spatial scales appropriate for the lenslet spacing, and much of the <20-nm rms systematic difference between the two measurements was due to diffraction artifacts that were present in the interferometer data but not in the Shack-Hartmann sensor data. The results suggest that Shack-Hartmann sensors could replace phase-shifting interferometers for many applications, with particular advantages for large-optic metrology.

3.
Appl Opt ; 32(34): 6938-44, 1993 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20856549

ABSTRACT

A condenser system couples the radiation source to an imaging system, controlling the uniformity and partial coherence at the object, which ultimately affects the characteristics of the aerial image. A soft-x-ray projection lithography system based on a ring-field imaging system and a laser-produced plasma x-ray source places considerable constraints on the design of a condenser system. Two designs are proposed, critical illumination and Köhler illumination, each of which requires three mirrors and scanning for covering the entire ring field with the required uniformity and partial coherence. Images based on Hopkins' formulation of partially coherent imaging are simulated.

5.
Appl Opt ; 13(3): 671-8, 1974 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20126041

ABSTRACT

A ray and wavefront analysis is the basis of an interpretation of the aberration balancing merit function in Grey's lens design program. From each of several field angles, this program traces a coarse grid of rays through an axially symmetric optical system. A polynomial in a region around each ray describes the wave error. This polynomial includes terms (through second order) in aperture, field angle, and wavelength variables. The coefficients of the terms in the polynomial are calculated from real and differential ray trace data. The merit function is the variance of the wave error, obtained by squaring and integrating the polynomials over appropriate ranges of the variables. Distortion is removed from the wave error polynomials and is included in the merit function in a unique manner.

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