Spectroscopic device
09772225 · 2017-09-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01J3/0208
PHYSICS
G02B13/16
PHYSICS
G01J3/32
PHYSICS
International classification
G01J3/00
PHYSICS
G02F1/1335
PHYSICS
G02B13/16
PHYSICS
Abstract
A spectroscope device is provided to maintain the uniformity of the central transmitting wavelength in the field of view and to minimize the broaden of the bandwidth of the transmitting wavelengths in an optical lens using an optical tunable filter (variable wavelength filter), even with a wide field of view and/or a large numerical aperture. A space is defined in which, when each beam that is incident from each off-axial object point on the object surface toward the optical lens that includes a plurality of lens elements between an object surface and a conjugate real image surface reaches the optical tunable filter, the chief ray is maintained parallel to the optical axis. Therefore, if an optical tunable filter is disposed in this space, each beam is always incident normal to the filter, so only the narrow band components at the specific central wavelength can be transmitted.
Claims
1. An optical lens unit comprising: a plurality of lens elements disposed between an object surface and an adjacent real image surface conjugate to the object surface, wherein the plurality of lens elements receiving beams propagating from each of off-axial object points on the object surface; and an optical tunable filter for selecting any wavelength band of each of the beams; wherein at least one light ray contained in each of the beams being parallel to an optical axis of the optical lens in a space between the plurality of lens elements, and the optical tunable filter is disposed in the space.
2. The optical lens unit of claim 1, further comprising a depolarization filter between the object surface and the optical tunable filter.
3. The optical lens unit of claim 2, further comprising a polarization filter between the object surface and the depolarization filter.
4. The optical lens unit of claim 3, further comprising a rotator for changing the polarizing direction of the polarizer.
5. The optical lens unit of claim 1, wherein the at least one light ray comprises the chief ray for each of the beams.
6. An optical device for measuring at least one of wavelength, amplitude and phase of any beam using the optical lens unit of claim 3.
7. A spectroscopic device comprising: an optical lens unit comprising a plurality of lens elements disposed between an object surface and an adjacent real image surface conjugate to the object surface, wherein the plurality of lens elements receiving beams propagating from each of off-axial object points on the object surface, and makes at least one light ray contained in each of the beams substantially parallel to an optical axis of the optical lens; an optical tunable filter for selecting any wavelength of the beam, wherein the optical tunable filter is disposed in a space where the at least one light ray contained in each of the beams is substantially parallel to the optical axis of the optical lens; and a photodetector for detecting the light ray with any wavelength transmitted through the optical tunable filter.
8. An optical device for measuring at least one of wavelength, amplitude and phase of any beam using the optical lens unit of claim 4.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(9) The following is a description of an embodiment of the optical lens according to the present invention, with reference to the drawings. Note that a variable central wavelength filter disposed in the optical lens of the present invention is described as a liquid crystal tunable filter (hereinafter, referred to as an “LCTF”), but it is not limited, and can be installed any other types of variable central wavelength filter, such as a tunable Fabry-Perot interferometer.
(10) To clarify the differences between the present invention and the conventional technology, a conventional spectroscopic device using an LCTF will be described first. As illustrated in
(11) By appropriately setting of the voltage applied to each liquid crystal cell, the transmitting wavelength of each unit can be adjusted as desired without a mechanical operation, and as a result, the central wavelength of the transmitted light of the overall laminate-based LCTF can be selected as desired. Therefore, the quantity of color information obtained can be significantly increased, and the distinctiveness of the spectroscopic indices can be markedly improved.
(12) Also, the transition time required to switch from any wavelength to any other wavelength depends on the combination of the units, but is normally several tens of milliseconds, so narrow band image at the interesting wavelength can be rapidly tuned out.
(13) The LCTF can determine the type and/or state of the object rapidly and accurately, which is due to acquiring spectral information of the object in the way without any contact on the object. While, the central wavelength of the transmitting band and the band width are significantly depends both on the incident angle of the light to the LCTF and angular distribution of the incident angles. This leads the non-uniformity of the central wavelength within the field of view of the LCTF based spectrograph.
(14) This effect generally appears rotational asymmetrically around the normal axis of the LCTF surface as illustrating in
(15) As illustrated in
(16) Polychromatic light from each point on the object surface is collimated into a parallel beam by the lens unit 1. By allocating a LCTF 10 at the exit pupil position of lens unit 1, this optical layout allows the passing only the limited wavelength through the LCTF, and thus narrow band image can be formed on the image surface 20 by the lens unit 2.
(17) However, in this case, it is impossible to fully achieve the spectral uniformity of the central wavelength within the whole image coverage, when an image covers with a wide field of view. The reason is relating to the being tangible of the problem discussed above, which means that the incident angle of any oblique beams to the LCTF 10 naturally become significantly larger relative to the normal axis of the LCTF surface. Thus, conventional configuration illustrated as
(18) In contrast, as illustrated in
(19) More specifically, by the lens unit 5, chief rays for each beam from off-axial object points are arranged to be parallel to the optical axis X in the space between the object surface and the first lens unit 5. Therefore, if the LCTF 10 is disposed in the space, the beams from any positions over a wide field of view (in particular, see the beam B4) nearly vertically enter onto the LCTF 10 (i.e., the incident angle relative to the optical axis X is substantially zero, then the angle is substantially normal to the entrance surface of the LCTF). However, practically, it is not necessary what the chief rays aiming to the LCTF 10 are completely parallel to the optical axis X. The incident angle of the beam aiming to the LCTF 10 can be maintained within a narrow range of angles. In order to achieve the spectral properties of the LCTF 10, the incident angle of each chief ray contained in the beam should be maintained less than 10 degrees relative to the optical axis X.
(20) Note that taking into consideration that optical aberration occurs in real use cases, the chief rays might not be parallel to the optical axis X, and other light rays could also be parallel to the optical axis X. Thus, the present embodiment can be applied to the case that any other ray rather than the chief ray in the beam is parallel to the optical axis on the entrance surface of LCTF. Also note that as a result of aberrations, a plurality of rays within a beam may be simultaneously parallel to the optical axis, but in this case also the present invention can be applied.
(21) In this way, for beams from any positions over a wide field of view, the chief ray of each beam is made parallel to the optical axis X by the first lens unit 5 (and the divergence angles of rays other than the chief ray are minimized), and subsequently the paralleled or substantially-paralleled rays can enter the LCTF. Thus, over the whole field of view, in particular over a wide field of view, the central wavelengths for each light beam that has propagated through the LCTF can be uniformly maintained. As a result, since the shifts of the transmitting wavelength corresponding to any positions in the field of view can be negligibly small, only the transmitting bands which are uniformly tuned by the LCTF 10 can produce the final image by the third optical unit 7, and can be acquired narrow band image without significant wavelength shift in the whole image coverage.
(22) Further, for the wide field of view, it should be noted that the bandwidth of the acquired narrow band image obtained by a spectrograph which incorporates the LCTF 10 into the lens configuration of the present invention as illustrated in
(23) Note that in addition to the LCTF 10, the configuration of a spectral imaging device with the LCTF 10 illustrated in
(24) In addition to the technical advantage of being able to deal with a markedly wider field of view, the present invention may easily achieve a compact spectroscope imaging device because the LCTF 10 is not disposed in the space facing two infinite conjugates configured by the lens unit 1 and unit 2 as illustrated in
(25) Also, the optical configuration of the present invention has the technical advantages of not only providing of an acquiring image for an object being measured covered with a wide field of view, but also solving the problem caused from the LCTF 10 incorporated into an unit with a fast optics (large numerical aperture) even for a narrow field of view.
(26) The background is that the plurality of rays propagated from each object point toward an optical imager with a large numerical aperture are not uniformed each other with respect to the incident angle relative to the LCTF, so that the such rays that have propagated through the LCTF 10 cause various central wavelengths in a beam, and then the produced image composed by such rays is to be an image with broaden bandwidth.
(27) Generally, since narrower the width of transmitting band corresponds the higher monochromaticity, it is natural that the broadening amount is constrained within a required criteria. However, in a conventional imaging optics with large numerical aperture, the transmitting band width in wavelength cannot be made narrow. In contrast, the lens layout of optical configuration in the present invention can provide the significantly higher uniformity of the incident angle to the LCTF 10, and manage chief rays to be parallel to the optical axis X. Thus, for each incident beam comprising the chief ray from each object point on the object plane toward the LCTF 10, each incident angle relative to the LCTF 10 maintains within a narrow range which centered must be zero. Therefore, it is avoided to broadening the transmitting band width of the LCTF caused by the variation of oblique incidence. so that it is possible to realize the desired an tunable narrow band filter.
(28) Next, the exemplary embodiment of the present invention is provided to use the depolarizer 11 (in
(29) In order to solve this problem, the prevent invention depolarizes the polarized light before the beam arrives to the LCTF. In other words, the depolarizing plate 11 (in
(30) Depolarizing the beam with polarization information that is propagating from the object being measured using the depolarizing plate 11 disposed in front of the LCTF 10 means that the polarization information of the beam which the object being measured originally had is not used. Therefore, preferably, the polarizer 12 (in
(31) Then, the beam is depolarized by the depolarizing plate 11, so that the beam component which matched just to the tuned wavelength passes through the LCTF 10. In this way, the wavelength (color), the amplitude (intensity), and phase (polarization) of the incident beam can all be detected.
(32) Also, the polarizer 12 can be rotated around the optical axis of the lens system. The extracted polarization direction can be selected by rotating the polarizer 12. In this way, it is possible to extract the polarization component in only a specific direction from the object being measured. However, rotating the polarizer 12 is just one means for extracting specific phase information, and any means may be used in order to control the polarization direction by an electronic method or a mechanical method. Note that originally the LCTF 10 functioned optically as a polarizer, so rotating the LCTF 10 around the optical axis of the lens without providing the depolarizing plate 11 and the polarizer 12 is one method of extracting the orientation of the polarized light from the object being measured. However, in principle, electrical wiring must be provided to apply voltage to the LCTF 10, so incorporating a rotational function is difficult in terms of the wiring routing. However, the configuration of the present invention as described above has the technical significance that this difficulty is avoided.
(33) Although not limited to this, for example, the spectral imaging device incorporating the LCTF 10 into the lens configuration of the present invention as illustrated in