Percival F. Almoro
University of the Philippines Diliman
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Percival F. Almoro.
Applied Optics | 2006
Percival F. Almoro; Giancarlo Pedrini; Wolfgang Osten
The recording of the volume speckle field from an object at different planes combined with the wave propagation equation allows the reconstruction of the wavefront phase and amplitude without requiring a reference wave. The main advantage of this single-beam multiple-intensity reconstruction (SBMIR) technique is the simple experimental setup because no reference wave is required as in the case of holography. The phase retrieval technique is applied to the investigation of diffusely transmitting and reflecting objects. The effects of different parameters on the quality of reconstructions are investigated by simulation and experiment. Significant enhancements of the reconstructions are observed when the number of intensity measurements is 15 or more and the sequential measurement distance is 0.5 mm or larger. Performing two iterations during the reconstruction process using the calculated phase also leads to better reconstruction. The results from computer simulations confirm the experiments. Analysis of transverse and longitudinal intensity distributions of a volume speckle field for the SBMIR technique is presented. Enhancing the resolution method by shifting the camera a distance of a half-pixel in the lateral direction improves the sampling of speckle patterns and leads to better quality reconstructions. This allows the possibility of recording wave fields from larger test objects.
Optics Letters | 2007
Arun Anand; Giancarlo Pedrini; Wolfgang Osten; Percival F. Almoro
A light beam with an ideal wavefront that is transmitted or reflected from an object is modified by different characteristics of the object such as shape, refractive index, density, or temperature. Wavefront sensing therefore yields valuable information about the system or the changes happening to the system. A new method for wavefront sensing using a random amplitude mask and a phase retrieval method based on the Rayleigh-Sommerfeld wave propagation equation is described. The proposed method has many potential applications ranging from phase contrast imaging and measurement of lens aberration to shape measurement of three-dimensional objects.
Optics Letters | 2009
Arun Anand; Vani K. Chhaniwal; Percival F. Almoro; Giancarlo Pedrini; Wolfgang Osten
Shape and deformation measurement of diffusely reflecting 3D objects are very important in many application areas, including quality control, nondestructive testing, and design. When rough objects are exposed to coherent beams, the scattered light produces speckle fields. A method to measure the shape and deformation of 3D objects from the sequential intensity measurements of volume speckle field and phase retrieval based on angular-spectrum propagation technique is described here. The shape of a convex spherical surface was measured directly from the calculated phase map, and micrometer-sized deformation induced on a metal sheet was obtained upon subtraction of the phase, corresponding to unloaded and loaded states. Results from computer simulations confirm the experiments.
Optics Express | 2007
Percival F. Almoro; Wilson Garcia; Caesar Saloma
Multi-wavelength holography is demonstrated with a H(2) Raman shifter that is pumped with an elliptically-polarized pulsed 532 nm beam to produce temporally coherent, intense, polarized output lines. Digital holograms of two-dimensional colored objects are recorded using Raman output lines at 630.4 nm (S(05), Red), 532 nm (Rayleigh, Green) and 435.7 nm (aS(10), Blue). Object reconstruction is done numerically via the convolution method and colored object recognition is achieved by multi-channel correlation of the Red, Green, and Blue reconstructions of the reference and the target object.
Applied Optics | 2008
Percival F. Almoro; Steen G. Hanson
A random phase plate is prepared by illuminating a photoresist plate with a fully developed speckle field and using the developed phase plate (DPP) as a diffuser. Wavefront sensing is implemented using phase retrieval based on the recording of speckle intensity patterns at various distances from the DPP and the wave propagation equation. The effects of the roughness height of the DPP on the phase retrieval are investigated. From simulations a roughness height of lambda/10 results in a speckle field that yields good phase reconstruction for the spherical test wavefront incident on the DPP. From the experiments different portions of the DPP that received varying exposures are examined. A section of the phase plate with a characteristic roughness height facilitated the generation of a speckle field that is optimum for the phase retrieval algorithm. Thus a random phase plate with varying roughness height allows optimized measurements of wavefronts with different curvatures. Analytical expressions describing the second-order intensity statistics (fourth-order field statistics) for a field traversing a specific diffuser are presented. This DPP will not give rise to a fully developed speckle field, but knowing the statistics of the depth of the DPP will facilitate a rigorous treatment of the problem.
Applied Optics | 2009
Percival F. Almoro; Anne Margarette S. Maallo; Steen G. Hanson
Wavefront reconstruction is carried out using sequentially recorded speckle patterns and an iterative phase retrieval method based on wave propagation. A novel fast-convergent algorithm that maintains the propagation distance in the iteration step equal to the distance between measurement planes is demonstrated. Employing the new algorithm, influences of the number of measurement planes, number of iterations, and uncertainties in the detectors transverse and axial positions on the rate of phase convergence are analyzed experimentally. A conceptual design for a dynamic wavefront sensor using arrays of beam splitters and detectors for parallel speckle recording is described.
Optics Letters | 2009
Percival F. Almoro; Phanindra N. Gundu; Steen G. Hanson
What we believe to be a novel technique for wavefront aberration measurement using speckle patterns is presented. The aberration correction is done numerically. A tilted lens is illuminated with a partially developed speckle field, and the transmitted light intensity is sampled at axially displaced planes. The speckle intensity patterns are then sent to a phase-retrieval algorithm to reconstruct the complete wavefront. The nature of the wavefront aberration is determined through Zernike polynomials. Numerical correction of the perturbed wavefront is performed based on rms error and the Strehl ratio. Restoration of the wavefront from a phase object with high spatial frequency content shows the effectiveness of our method.
Optics Letters | 2010
Percival F. Almoro; Giancarlo Pedrini; Phanindra N. Gundu; Wolfgang Osten; Steen G. Hanson
A technique for phase microscopy using a phase diffuser and a reconstruction algorithm is proposed. A magnified specimen wavefront is projected on the diffuser plane that modulates the wavefront into a speckle field. The speckle patterns at axially displaced planes are sampled and used in an iterative phase retrieval algorithm based on a wave-propagation equation. The technique offers a whole-field and high-resolution wavefront reconstruction of unstained microstructures. Phase maps of photoresist targets and human cheek cells are obtained to demonstrate the effectiveness of our method.
Optics Letters | 2007
Percival F. Almoro; Giancarlo Pedrini; Wolfgang Osten
The resolution of the reconstructed wave by a phase-retrieval method using a volume-speckle field depends on the aperture defined by the size of the CCD array. The use of a larger aperture is introduced by measuring the speckle field at two different positions in the transverse plane and stitching the measurements together. Improvements in the quality of reconstructions are demonstrated experimentally and by computer simulations. Undesirable effects of camera tilt on the quality of reconstructions from synthetic aperture intensity measurements are experimentally observed and corrected.
Journal of the European Optical Society: Rapid Publications | 2012
Mostafa Agour; Percival F. Almoro
A phase retrieval technique using a spatial light modulator (SLM) and a phase diffuser for a fast reconstruction of smooth wave fronts is demonstrated experimentally. Diffuse illumination of a smooth test object with the aid of a phase diffuser (maximum phase shift, ΔΦ = 0.85π) results in a significant diversity in the intensity measurements which, in turn, is beneficial for a non-stagnating iterative phase reconstruction. The use of the SLM enables accurate and fast speckle intensity recording and active correction of misalignments in the setup. The effectiveness of the technique is demonstrated in the optical testing of lenses.