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  2. Rayleigh interferometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rayleigh_interferometer

    Rayleigh interferometer at the National Bureau of Standards. In optics, a Rayleigh interferometer is a type of interferometer which employs two beams of light from a single source.

  3. Astronomical optical interferometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomical_optical...

    A simple two-element optical interferometer. Light from two small telescopes (shown as lenses) is combined using beam splitters at detectors 1, 2, 3 and 4.The elements create a 1/4 wave delay in the light, allowing the phase and amplitude of the interference visibility to be measured, thus giving information about the shape of the light source.

  4. Interferometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interferometry

    Figure 1. The light path through a Michelson interferometer.The two light rays with a common source combine at the half-silvered mirror to reach the detector. They may either interfere constructively (strengthening in intensity) if their light waves arrive in phase, or interfere destructively (weakening in intensity) if they arrive out of phase, depending on the exact distances between the ...

  5. Astronomical interferometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomical_interferometer

    An astronomical interferometer or telescope array is a set of separate telescopes, mirror segments, or radio telescope antennas that work together as a single telescope to provide higher resolution images of astronomical objects such as stars, nebulas and galaxies by means of interferometry.

  6. Common-path interferometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common-path_interferometer

    Lateral shearing interferometry is a self-referencing method of wavefront sensing. Instead of comparing a wavefront with a separate path reference wavefront, lateral shearing interferometry interferes a wavefront with a shifted version of itself. As a result, it is sensitive to the slope of a wavefront, not the wavefront shape per se. The ...

  7. Physics of optical holography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physics_of_Optical_Holography

    Exact reconstruction is required in holographic interferometry, where the holographically reconstructed wavefront interferes with the wavefront coming from the actual object, giving a null fringe if there has been no movement of the object and mapping out the displacement if the object has moved. This requires very precise relocation of the ...

  8. Category:Interferometers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Interferometers

    Self-mixing interferometry; Shearing interferometer; ... X-ray interferometer This page was last edited on 29 August 2020, at 18:44 (UTC). ...

  9. Sagnac effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sagnac_effect

    The first interferometry experiment aimed at observing the correlation of angular velocity and phase-shift was performed by the French scientist Georges Sagnac in 1913. Its purpose was to detect "the effect of the relative motion of the ether". [1] [2] Sagnac believed that his results constituted proof of the existence of a stationary aether ...