Author:
Jackson Stuart A.,Sova Raymond M.
Abstract
An optical window is a critical component of an imaging system. When operating in harsh
environments with extreme heating, nonuniform temperature changes
occur throughout the window and cause nonuniform refractive index
changes and mechanical deformations due to thermal expansion, which
can degrade the imaging system’s performance. In this paper, we
present results collected from an experimental setup developed to
characterize these aberrations. This setup includes a CO2 laser for sample heating, an infrared
camera for measuring front and back surface temperatures, and a
visible imaging system and a wavefront sensor for measuring
degradations of a collimated beam from a point source transmitted
through the heated window. Sapphire samples are laser heated with a
Gaussian profile to temperatures in excess of 500 K with
surface temperature gradients in excess of 15 K/mm. These
measurements are compared with first principles models, which show
quantitative agreement for window temperatures and qualitative
agreement with the transmitted wavefront and imaged point source.
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Engineering (miscellaneous),Electrical and Electronic Engineering