Article | REF: R358 V1

Noise in optical measurements

Authors: Jean‐Pierre GOURE, Gérald BRUN

Publication date: March 10, 1997

You do not have access to this resource.
Click here to request your free trial access!

Already subscribed? Log in!


Overview

Français

Read this article from a comprehensive knowledge base, updated and supplemented with articles reviewed by scientific committees.

Read the article

AUTHORS

  • Jean‐Pierre GOURE: Professor

  • Gérald BRUN: Senior Lecturer - Signal Processing and Instrumentation Laboratory – URA CNRS 842 - Université J. Monnet – Saint-Étienne Faculty of Science and Technology

 INTRODUCTION

Optics has undergone spectacular development over the last few decades, and today remains an evolving science linked to advanced technology.

There are several reasons for this revival:

  • the advent of lasers in the 60s, which made coherent light sources available, and the miniaturization of these sources thanks to advances in integrated optics;

  • the development of new techniques, such as holography and optical information processing, which have developed with coherent sources;

  • the use of powerful computational resources, supported by computer systems with enhanced performance and reduced footprint, to model a wide range of optical components: ray-tracing calculations to optimize imaging lenses, modeling of light propagation in confined waveguides (optical fibers or planar guides, etc.);

  • the development of optoelectronics and fiber optic telecommunications;

  • the ever-increasing use of optics in metrology applications: fiber optic or integrated optics sensors, laser triangulation, lidars, etc.

The formalism, applications and miniaturization of optical components have led to optics becoming increasingly similar to electronics, and optical measurement has become standard practice both in research laboratories and on industrial production lines. As a result, the recognition of noise and its sources with a view to eliminating it, as well as the extraction of the signal embedded in the noise, are now essential metrological concerns.

For a proper understanding of the rest of the presentation, we invite the reader to familiarize himself with a number of concepts concerning signal processing and light phenomena. In particular, we recommend prior reading of the articles "Random processes" [R 210] and "Random functions" [R 220] , in the present treatise Mesures et Contrôle, and of the articles "Characteristic parameters of a signal", in the present treatise Mesures et Contrôle. and Signal Processing also in this Measurement and Control treatise.

...

You do not have access to this resource.

Exclusive to subscribers. 97% yet to be discovered!

You do not have access to this resource.
Click here to request your free trial access!

Already subscribed? Log in!


The Ultimate Scientific and Technical Reference

A Comprehensive Knowledge Base, with over 1,200 authors and 100 scientific advisors
+ More than 10,000 articles and 1,000 how-to sheets, over 800 new or updated articles every year
From design to prototyping, right through to industrialization, the reference for securing the development of your industrial projects

This article is included in

Electronic measurements and tests

This offer includes:

Knowledge Base

Updated and enriched with articles validated by our scientific committees

Services

A set of exclusive tools to complement the resources

Practical Path

Operational and didactic, to guarantee the acquisition of transversal skills

Doc & Quiz

Interactive articles with quizzes, for constructive reading

Subscribe now!

Ongoing reading
Noise in optical measurements