DocumentCode
773793
Title
Fresnel transform phase retrieval from magnitude
Author
Pitts, Todd A. ; Greenleaf, James F.
Author_Institution
Accent Opt. Technol., Albuquerque, NM, USA
Volume
50
Issue
8
fYear
2003
Firstpage
1035
Lastpage
1045
Abstract
This report presents a generalized projection method for recovering the phase of a finite support, two-dimensional signal from knowledge of its magnitude in the spatial position and Fresnel transform domains. We establish the uniqueness of sampled monochromatic scalar field phase given Fresnel transform magnitude and finite region of support constraints for complex signals. We derive an optimally relaxed version of the algorithm resulting in a significant reduction in the number of iterations needed to obtain useful results. An advantage of using the Fresnel transform (as opposed to Fourier) for measurement is that the shift-invariance of the transform operator implies retention of object location information in the transformed image magnitude. As a practical application in the context of ultrasound beam measurement we discuss the determination of small optical phase shifts from near field optical intensity distributions. Experimental data are used to reconstruct the phase shape of an optical field immediately after propagating through a wide bandwidth ultrasonic pulse. The phase of each point on the optical wavefront is proportional to the ray sum of pressure through the ultrasound pulse (assuming low ultrasonic intensity). An entire pressure field was reconstructed in three dimensions and compared with a calibrated hydrophone measurement. The comparison is excellent, demonstrating that the phase retrieval is quantitative.
Keywords
Fresnel diffraction; calibration; object detection; ultrasonic applications; ultrasonic measurement; Fresnel transform phase retrieval; calibrated hydrophone measurement; object location information; pressure field; sampled monochromatic scalar field phase; spatial position domains; two-dimensional signal; ultrasound beam measurement; Bandwidth; Fourier transforms; Image reconstruction; Optical propagation; Optical pulse shaping; Optical pulses; Phase measurement; Shape; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic variables measurement;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-3010
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TUFFC.2003.1226547
Filename
1226547
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