Paper
28 December 1992 Athermalization of optical instruments from the optomechanical viewpoint
Thomas H. Jamieson
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Abstract
The refractive properties and physical dimensions of optical components change with temperature, and hence also do the characteristics of optical systems. Athermalization is the principle of stabilizing the optical performance with respect to temperature, either by designing the optical elements and mounts to be mutually compensating, or by including movable corrective mechanisms. For refractive materials, two coefficients can be defined which characterize the thermooptical sensitivity, one applicable to uniform temperature changes, and the other to spatial temperature gradients. For normal optical glasses, the effects are small, but for plastics, infrared materials, and liquids, the thermal effects can be so great as to limit their usefulness. Passive athermalization is analogous to achromatism and optical systems can be designed simultaneously achromatic and athermal. The use of composite, and high expansion mounts employing plastics or fluids, gives greater control of thermo-optical effects. Active athermalization uses auxiliary power to drive compensating elements to maintain optical performance. Commercial optical design programs can be used to model and analyze thermally perturbed systems accurately.
© (1992) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Thomas H. Jamieson "Athermalization of optical instruments from the optomechanical viewpoint", Proc. SPIE 10265, Optomechanical Design: A Critical Review, 1026508 (28 December 1992); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.61105
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CITATIONS
Cited by 27 scholarly publications and 5 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Optical components

Optical design

Temperature metrology

Active optics

Composites

Glasses

Infrared materials

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