Revealing Structural Organization with Liquid Crystal-based Spectral Imaging Polarimetry
Structural organization refers to the particular ordering of scatterers. Probing structural organization by imaging polarized spectral scatter provides insight into the composition of a medium, and can aid in remote sensing, the identification of tissue pathologies, and material characterization and...
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ndltd-pdx.edu-oai-pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu-open_access_etds-33272019-10-20T04:51:20Z Revealing Structural Organization with Liquid Crystal-based Spectral Imaging Polarimetry Gladish, James Campbell Structural organization refers to the particular ordering of scatterers. Probing structural organization by imaging polarized spectral scatter provides insight into the composition of a medium, and can aid in remote sensing, the identification of tissue pathologies, and material characterization and differentiation. The vector nature of polarized light enables it to interact with optical anisotropies within a medium, while the spectral aspect of polarization is sensitive to small-scale structure. However, many polarization studies have limitations, as they provide qualitative image analysis, incomplete anisotropy information, or both. The ability to image the effects of anisotropy and small-scale structure at multiple wavelengths is key for parameterizing structural organization. The Stokes/Mueller formalism is a framework that quantifies a medium's complete spectral polarization response, and allows for the parameterization of structural organization. Additionally, advances in liquid crystal (LC) technology have resulted in new polarimetric devices. These computer-controlled devices impart spectral polarization effects on the millisecond timescale with no mechanically moving hardware, providing the ability for making rapid polarimetric measurements. This dissertation describes a methodology for revealing structural organization by exploiting the Stokes/Mueller formalism and by utilizing measurements from a spectral imaging polarimeter constructed from variable retardance LC devices, such as liquid crystal variable retarders (LCVRs) and a liquid crystal tunable filter (LCTF). The methodology includes developing the system, the Stokes/Mueller model, and all of the procedures, calibrations, and data interpretation. Developing the system also consists of component and system calibration, a system sensitivity and performance analysis, and finally test measurements for system validation. The final validation measurement is made on a mineral sample for inferring structural organization. 2015-06-04T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/2325 https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3327&context=open_access_etds Dissertations and Theses PDXScholar Polarization (Light) -- Measurement Polarimetry Optical measurements -- Remote sensing Other Electrical and Computer Engineering |
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Polarization (Light) -- Measurement Polarimetry Optical measurements -- Remote sensing Other Electrical and Computer Engineering |
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Polarization (Light) -- Measurement Polarimetry Optical measurements -- Remote sensing Other Electrical and Computer Engineering Gladish, James Campbell Revealing Structural Organization with Liquid Crystal-based Spectral Imaging Polarimetry |
description |
Structural organization refers to the particular ordering of scatterers. Probing structural organization by imaging polarized spectral scatter provides insight into the composition of a medium, and can aid in remote sensing, the identification of tissue pathologies, and material characterization and differentiation. The vector nature of polarized light enables it to interact with optical anisotropies within a medium, while the spectral aspect of polarization is sensitive to small-scale structure. However, many polarization studies have limitations, as they provide qualitative image analysis, incomplete anisotropy information, or both. The ability to image the effects of anisotropy and small-scale structure at multiple wavelengths is key for parameterizing structural organization. The Stokes/Mueller formalism is a framework that quantifies a medium's complete spectral polarization response, and allows for the parameterization of structural organization. Additionally, advances in liquid crystal (LC) technology have resulted in new polarimetric devices. These computer-controlled devices impart spectral polarization effects on the millisecond timescale with no mechanically moving hardware, providing the ability for making rapid polarimetric measurements. This dissertation describes a methodology for revealing structural organization by exploiting the Stokes/Mueller formalism and by utilizing measurements from a spectral imaging polarimeter constructed from variable retardance LC devices, such as liquid crystal variable retarders (LCVRs) and a liquid crystal tunable filter (LCTF). The methodology includes developing the system, the Stokes/Mueller model, and all of the procedures, calibrations, and data interpretation. Developing the system also consists of component and system calibration, a system sensitivity and performance analysis, and finally test measurements for system validation. The final validation measurement is made on a mineral sample for inferring structural organization. |
author |
Gladish, James Campbell |
author_facet |
Gladish, James Campbell |
author_sort |
Gladish, James Campbell |
title |
Revealing Structural Organization with Liquid Crystal-based Spectral Imaging Polarimetry |
title_short |
Revealing Structural Organization with Liquid Crystal-based Spectral Imaging Polarimetry |
title_full |
Revealing Structural Organization with Liquid Crystal-based Spectral Imaging Polarimetry |
title_fullStr |
Revealing Structural Organization with Liquid Crystal-based Spectral Imaging Polarimetry |
title_full_unstemmed |
Revealing Structural Organization with Liquid Crystal-based Spectral Imaging Polarimetry |
title_sort |
revealing structural organization with liquid crystal-based spectral imaging polarimetry |
publisher |
PDXScholar |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/2325 https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3327&context=open_access_etds |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT gladishjamescampbell revealingstructuralorganizationwithliquidcrystalbasedspectralimagingpolarimetry |
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1719271795680346112 |