Abstract:
The possibility of using Young–Michelson and Brown–Twiss interferometers for measuring the angular dimensions and parameters of the surface shape of remote passively scattering and self-luminous nonplanar rough objects by optical radiation propagating from them is substantiated. The analysis is based on the properties of approximate transverse functions of field coherence Bt and Bt' and intensity coherence Bti and Bti' formed by the time averaging of the products of fields and intensities taken at two points of a receiving aperture (the prime denotes self-luminous objects). The averaging time is set to be much longer than the coherence time of radiation propagating from an object. It is shown that for the radiation coherence length much smaller than the depth of the visible region of the object, the functions Bt and Bt' are proportional to the Fourier transform of the intensity distribution in the image of a remote object, which is the generalisation of the Van Cittert–Zernicke theorem to the case of a nonplanar object, while functions Bti and Bti' are proportional to the squares of the modulus of the Fourier transform of this distribution. It is also shown that the recording of functions Bt and Bt' with a Young–Michelson interferometer gives only the angular dimensions of the visible region of objects, whereas the recording of functions Bti and Bti' with a
Brown–Twiss interferometer allows one to find these dimensions and the radius of curvature of the object surface.