The present invention relates to a spectral interferometry apparatus and method, which can be used to monitor or measure an optical path difference by following a characteristic of an indicating signal.
There is a growing interest in the application of low coherence interferometry in the general field of sensing. Low coherence interferometry methods provide absolute distance measurements and are well suited for measuring absolute or relative distances based on signal returned by rough reflecting surfaces. Spectral low coherence interferometry (LCI) methods are based on the measurement of periodicity of the channeled spectrum of the optical signal coming from a two beam interferometer. The larger the optical path difference (OPD) in the interferometer, the denser the spectral modulation of the channeled spectrum. This can be read using a spectrometer, employing a dispersing element, such as a prism or a diffraction grating, to disperse respectively diffract light on a linear photodetecting camera to transduce the channeled spectrum of the interferometer output into a temporal signal, when the interferometer is excited by a large bandwidth optical source. Alternatively, a narrow band tuneable optical source, a swept source (SS), can be employed. By tuning the optical frequency of the optical source, the channeled spectrum is scanned point by point and a temporal signal is obtained again.
Channeled spectrum methods have been used in the sensing and fibre optic sensing field. Several implementations are known, using photodetector linear arrays, such as CCD and CMOS, to interrogate the optical signal output of the sensing interferometer, which allows to scan the channeled spectrum and produce a measuring signal. Such a method and device are disclosed in “Channeled Spectrum Display using a CCD Array for Student Laboratory Demonstrations”, published by A. Gh. Podoleanu, S. Taplin, D. J. Webb and D. A. Jackson in the European J. Phys., 15, (1994), p. 266-271.
The advantage of the spectral methods is that the OPD information is translated into the periodicity of peaks and troughs in the channeled spectrum and no mechanical means are needed to scan the object in depth, when performing optical coherence tomography (OCT) of tissue.
If multi-layered objects are imaged, such as tissue, each layer will imprint its own channeled spectrum periodicity, depending on its depth, with the amplitude of the spectrum modulation proportional to the square root of the reflectivity of that layer. A fast Fourier transform (FFT) of the signal delivered by a linear photodetector array, a CMOS or CCD linear camera signal, translates the periodicity of the channeled spectrum into peaks of different frequencies, with the frequency directly related to the OPD value. This measurement method is called frequency domain LCI (FD-LCI). The reflectivity profile with depth obtained by FFT is termed as an A-scan. Grouping together several A-scans, a B-scan or a cross section optical coherence tomography (OCT) image is obtained.
If a SS is used to scan the channeled spectrum of the interferometer, then the channeled spectrum profile is obtained directly in time, as a signal delivered by a photodetector device, method called SS-LCI. The FFT of such a signal leads to an A-scan again.
The methods above present the disadvantage that information is obtained by performing FFT. This requires a processor or a PC. Also, the standard method requires a display device, usually a monitor of a PC or a Laptop. Despite the continuous progress in computing and digital signal processing, these systems and devices raise the size and cost of FD-LCI and SS-LCI systems and of their OCT counterparts, FD-OCT and SS-OCT systems.
In measurements of distances in the field, in constructions, industry, portable systems are required. To extend spectral domain—LCI measurements to such sensing and industrial applications, low cost, small size and reduced weight systems are necessary.
In ophthalmology, measurement of eye length is performed before any cataract operation. Such measurements are performed using high cost instruments. Such instruments have a large size and are expensive. There is a need for such measurements to be more accessible to small ophthalmology practices. There is also a proven need to liaise the audio signal to the value of a quantity to be measured in complex environments where the sight is concentrated on the most complex tasks, such as surgery.
The patent application US2005/023727 A1, by Podoleanu and Rogers, used a loudspeaker to indicate the strength of the interference signal in a time domain optical coherence tomography system. The audible signal strength was an indication of signal detected and was not used in any measurement of any quantity.
Patent application US2008/0218588 A1, proposes an audio signal to transmit information about a captured image. However, this audio signal is used for transmission means only and does not allow for the direct monitoring or measurement of a system parameter.
The present invention provides methods and apparatuses which can advantageously perform measurements of lengths using a minimum of devices which can be conveniently assembled in a small size, low weight and low cost instrument that can be operated independent of computational power, simply by following a meter indication, a needle, a digital indication, a source of light or a source of sound.
According to a first aspect of the invention there is provided a spectral interferometry method to measure an unknown length, based on an interferometer where an adjustment of an adjusting length device is performed until sound of a certain frequency is obtained. When the sound reaches maximum intensity, the value of the adjusting length provides a measure of the unknown length.
The unknown length could be that between an object and the instrument, could be that between two reflectors in a sensor, between two walls in constructions, between two parts in robotics, or the distance between the cornea and retina in an eye.
The present invention relates to a spectral interferometry apparatus and method, which can be used to monitor or measure an optical path difference by following a characteristic of an indicating signal.
In particular, the method may be Fourier domain optical low coherence interferometry (FD-LCI) or swept source optical low coherence interferometry (SS-LCI). As a further particularity, the characteristic of the indicating signal is the strength of sound and/or its pitch, or the strength of signal of a certain frequency passing through a pass band filter and determining an indication in the form of a voltage, light or sound. According to the invention, the measurement and monitoring may be performed without resorting to digital display or computational power, no PC is necessary. The method and apparatus presented may require a single adjustment until maximum is achieved for a sound or for the indication shown by a needle meter or by a digital meter, or for the intensity of light emitted by a displaying unit or by a light emitting diode (LED) or by several such LEDs. The adjustment may involve rotation of a knob or sliding a cursor along a ruler which reads the value of the unknown length. Guidance on the adjustment direction of the knob or cursor may be provided by following the pitch of the sound. Guidance on the adjustment direction may also be provided by the colour of a displaying device.
In a second aspect, there is provided a spectral interferometry apparatus using a broadband source and a linear array in a spectrometer which provides the measuring signal.
In a third aspect, there is provided a spectral interferometry apparatus where a tunable narrow band source and a photodetector unit delivers the measuring signal.
In a fourth aspect, measurement of the eye length is performed by focusing light on the anterior chamber, collecting light from the anterior chamber via a first optical delay and collecting light from the retina along a second optical delay, and where the measurement consists in adjusting one of the first or second delay or both until maximising the indication of a meter or the intensity of a light source or the strength of a sound of a certain frequency. Embodiments are disclosed based either on a large band source and a linear camera, or based on a tuneable narrow band source and a photodetecting unit.
In a fifth aspect, a configuration of Talbot bands is implemented to shift the maximum sensitivity of the FD-LCI method away from zero OPD, to a value of reference, OPDref and where the measurement of the unknown length is concluded when the OPD is adjusted to OPDref.
In a sixth aspect, a tandem interferometer is used, where a device is employed to modify an adjusting length in an adjusting interferometer part of the instrument and the unknown length is part of lengths of arms forming a sensing interferometer, where for example, the unknown length is the eye length, and where the beating of the two measuring signals, corresponding to each interferometer is produced using an electric mixer.
In a seventh aspect, a method and apparatus are provided to perform the operation of a stethoscope to produce sound at the rate of a heart beat, where the indicating signal follows in one or more of its characteristics, the movement of a heart wall,
The novel features which are believed to be characteristic of the present invention, as to its structure, organization, use and method of operation, together with further objectives and advantages thereof, will be better understood from the following drawings in which presently preferred embodiments of the invention will now be illustrated by way of example.
It is expressly understood, however, that the drawings are for the purpose of illustration and description only and are not intended as a definition of the limits of the invention.
Embodiments of this invention will now be described by way of example in association with the accompanying drawings in which:
Components which are the same in the various figures have been designated by the same numerals for ease of understanding.
Where optical fibres are used, this is only as an example and it should be noted that a bulk implementation is equally feasible, in which case the respective elements using in-fibre components, are to be replaced by optical paths and the directional fibre couplers by bulk beam-splitters, in the form of plates or cubes. Likewise, where bulk components are used, they could equally be replaced by optical fibre components.
The novel features which are believed to be characteristic of the present invention, as to its structure, organization, use and method of operation, together with further objectives and advantages thereof, will be better understood from the following discussion.
An embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention is shown in block diagram in
The signal 7 is fed out in a reading time TR, which is less than 1/F usually, as shown in
Those skilled in the art will recognise that different configurations are now known for optical sources to provide fast tuning rates of more than 100 kHz, of linewidth less than 0.1 nm within a bandwidth of more than 50 nm. Such sources use ring lasers equipped with an optical amplifier and an optical filter, as described in the following papers: M. A. Choma, K. Hsu J. A. Izatt, “Swept source optical coherence tomography using an all-fiber 1300-nm ring laser source,” J Biomedical Optics 10—4, 044009_pp. 044009-1 to 044009-6, 2005 and R. Huber, M. Wojtkowski, and J. G. Fujimoto, “Fourier Domain Mode Locking (FDML): A new laser operating regime and applications for optical coherence tomography,” Opt. Express 14, pp. 3225-3237, 2006.
However, such sources are still very expensive and it is not generally desirable to pair a low cost optical configuration as presented in this disclosure with such expensive sources. For the purpose of the invention, lower cost sources are therefore preferred, such sources may be based on a semiconductor laser diode whose current is ramped. Such sources are known in the field of frequency modulation continuous wave (FMCW) sensing, as for instance used in the article “Reflectometric fiber optic frequency-modulated continuous-wave interferometric displacement sensor” published by Zheng, J in Optical Engineering, Vol. 44, Issue 12, Article Number: 124404, December 2005 In this way, a few nm tuning bandwidth is easily achievable. The small tuning bandwidth leads to a poor depth resolution. However, even depth resolutions worse than 50 microns could be tolerated for certain measurements in low cost solutions. Other low cost swept sources are being developed which could find applications in the invention, using micro-electro-mechanical (MEM) based tuneable resonators. The larger the tuning bandwidth the higher the cost of such sources. For digital processing, a Fabry-Perot interferometer is also incorporated into swept sources to provide a clock which is subsequently used for linearization of data. If tuning bandwidths of 5-10 nm are targeted and such sources are also simplified not to include clock generation and no other circuit for linearization, then their cost is dramatically reduced.
The spectral interrogator in
Procedure
For both embodiments in
Let us say that we choose to identify an unknown OPD=δZ, as a small part of the distance between the surface of the object 3, point A, up to the interferometer, point B. This would mean a δZ/lc number of cycles in the channeled spectrum. Reading the linear array 63 in
The Audio Signal can be Utilised in Two Ways:
Intensity
A band pass filter, 82, will only transfer signal to its output when the frequency of the input signal. 7, is that chosen for the process of monitoring or measurement. This reference frequency correspond to a chosen reference OPD value, δZ. Let us consider a readout CCD (or tuning) frequency F=1 kHz and δZ/lc=10. This corresponds to a chosen reference value of the audio frequency f=10 kHz, as the main component in the frequency spectrum of the measuring signal. The measuring means 5 in
Pitch
Seeking maximum intensity in the loudspeaker requires scanning a knob or sliding a ruler in 5 in both directions. Preferably, the invention uses both the intensity of the signal at the output of 82 tuned on f as well as the pitch of the sound. To this goal, a second large bandwidth band pass filter, 84 is used. The pitch gives an indication on the direction of adjusting the measurement means 5. For the example above, the band pass filter 84 allows audio frequency signals of frequency 1 to 18 kHz, within the human hearing band.
The relative amplitude of the two signals in the two loudspeakers can be controlled by relatively adjusting the amplification in the amplifiers 81 and 83. When the signal entered into the bandwidth of 82, the signal in the loudspeaker 94 can be reduced to zero and the measurement finalised by maximising the sound in 92. Alternatively, only one loudspeaker is used, 94, to provide information on the direction of rotating the knob or sliding the cursor 5, and the optimum adjustment will only be guided by producing maximum in the light display device or LED 93 or/and the voltmeter 95. As a further possibility, several coloured LEDs are used, with different threshold actuating levels. A liquid crystal display device may also be used, or a coloured display device that display stripes of coloured bands, where the frequency of the colour is proportional to the amplitude of the signal. Several possibilities exist to sensitize the measurement, known being that the eye is more sensitive to colour difference than to the colour itself. Therefore, for each new position of the measuring means 5, the display device 93 provides at the same time, stripes of colour corresponding to the previous OPD value as to the current OPD value. The colour difference will then suggest the direction of adjusting the OPD using 5.
It is also possible to convert the frequency of the reading signal 7, into amplitude directly, using a frequency to amplitude convertor, 89, that drives a needle instrument, 95′, or a digital meter.
The measurement of OPD in both cases above relies on the value shown by the calibrated knob 5. This could be a micrometer screw, with division at 10 microns. Interpolation between such divisions can give a resolution in measurement better than 5 microns.
A proof of concept was set-up for the embodiment in
Applications
The method according to the invention can be used for measurement as well as to monitoring of distances. The stage 4 can be set at a reference value and from that moment, the fluctuation in distance of the object mirror 3 can be evaluated by moving stage 4 until sound is regained in the loudspeaker 92. Automatic procedures can also be devised according to means known in the art, by using the signal towards loudspeaker 94. If the pitch sound is higher than the desired frequency f, by actuating on means 5, the stage 4 is moved in the direction of increasing the reference path, to reduce the OPD=object path−reference path. If the pitch is lower than f, then the stage 4 is moved to reduce the reference path length in the interferometer for example.
Eye Length Measurement
A channeled spectrum is created by the interference of the two beams, object and reference reflected of the cornea 31, point A and from respectively retina 32, point B. The cornea signal is at least 1000 time stronger than the signal from the retina. Therefore, in order to balance the strengths of the two reflected signals, splitter 26 has a transmission much higher than the reflection, for instance 95% transmission (in which case a simple glass plate antireflection coated on one side could be used, or even 99%). Additional correction of amplitudes can be obtained by adjusting the transmission of the splitter 21 to smaller values than its reflection, in order to maximise the signal from the retina 32 for an input power towards the eye close to the safety limit. Further, an adjustable pinhole, 44, can be used to reduce the power towards the top, 31, of the object 3. In case the object is the eye, this also helps with extending the depth of focus of the object beam, to make the apparatus compatible with non-accurate axial distance position of the object 3 in respect to the apparatus.
One or both of the micrometer screws 5 or 5′ parts of the measuring means can be calibrated. The audio frequency of choice, 0.5-15 kHz can be chosen to correspond to a certain OPD value of reference, δz. This could be associated to the minimum, or the maximum, or the middle value in the range of eye lengths, let us say, to a value E=23 mm between points A and B. To accommodate measurements of eyes shorter or longer than this value, the micrometers 5 (or 5′) are equipped with rulers graded from 17 to 29 mm. Adjusting 5 or 5′ to regain maximum strength in 92 guided by the pitch in 94 leads to the current eye length value, E. Obviously, because the linear photodetector array, 63, may have only 1000-2000 pixels, the axial range may be limited to 1-4 mm. Therefore, the procedure involves turning the knob of the calibrated micrometer screw 51, or 52 or both until sound is heard in 94 followed by enhancement of sound in 92. It is possible that position of knobs (cursors, micrometer screws) 5 and 5′ are such that the OPD value is out of the limited axial range. In this case, the adjusting knob 5 or 5′ is moved to one extremity and back until the highest pitch, 18 kHz is heard. From that moment, adjustment is made to bring the pitch of the sound to that corresponding to the reference value δz.
To tolerate eventual placements of the eye 3 away from the ideal axial position where the object beam focuses on the cornea 31, lens 43 has a small focal length to prepare a small diameter beam launched towards the lens 29, and lens 29 has a long focal length, and in this way, a long depth of focus is achieved. This advantageously leads to less efficiency in collecting backscattered light from the cornea, 31, which returns much more than the retina, 32.
As additional elements which can be carried to the other embodiments dealing with eye length measurement, two indicators, 96 and 97 are used in the indicating block 9, to inform the user that sufficient signal is returned from the point A on the cornea, 31 and from the point B, on the retina, 32. They could be LEDs, driven by photodetectors 57 and 58 respectively, at the output of single mode couplers 55 and 56 respectively. The two couplers 55 and 56 are used to tap small portions of the signals returned from retina and cornea to excite the photodetectors 57 and 58. Before any measurement, it may be necessary to adjust the convergence or divergence of the object and reference beams to enhance the strengths of the signals reflected from points A, 31 and B, 32. The adjustment can be performed by moving axially the lenses 29 and 29″, or by using liquid crystal, electrically controlled lenses 29 and 29″, or using deformable MEMS mirrors as 29 and 29″.
The process of measurement, consisting in actuating on the adjusting means 5, is performed only if LEDs 96 and 97 are lit up. The object 3, a slab or the eye, is adjusted laterally until sufficient signal is returned to the interferometer 2 from both points 1 and 2. Only then the OPD is adjusted towards the pitch sought after in the loudspeaker 94 and towards maximum sound in loudspeaker 92.
The light reflected from point B, the retina 32, traverses the optical splitters 26 and 21 towards the focusing element 69 in the fiber launcher placed on the stage 41, where light is launched into fiber 33. The two beams are separated, as light form point B, retina 32, does not go into fibre 34 and light from point A, cornea 31, does not go into fibre 33. Light from fibre 33 is then conveyed via focusing element 35 into a collimated beam, 602, via a fourth optical splitter, 30. The collimated beams 601 and 602 can be superposed or totally separated spatially by a gap using the translation stage 43 which moves the launcher with fiber end and focusing element 35 laterally, using the micrometer screw 53, as explained in the US patent application 2007/0165234, Spectral interferometry method and apparatus, by A. Podoleanu.
Fibers 33 and 34 have similar lengths to keep the dispersion low, along with the element 71, which compensates for the dispersion in the eye, usually a cuvette of approximate length equal to twice the eye length and filled with water. The procedure of measuring the eye length is similar to that described above where one of the stages 41, or 42 or both are driven by micrometer screws 5 and 5′. The path difference in air between the two beams from the anterior and posterior chamber of the eye are adjustable using the two stages 41 and 42. One of the micrometer screws (or both) is (are) equipped with a ruler showing eye lengths of 17-28 mm, to cover the normal range of eye length values.
The advantage of the Talbot configuration is that the maximum sensitivity of the FD-LCI method can be shifted from OPD=0 to a larger OPD value. The peak of sensitivity can be shifted to the value of OPD chosen as reference, δz, and that which gives the pitch of reference in the loudspeaker 92. The shift of peak of sensitivity from OPD=0 is proportional to the gap between the two beam 601 and 602 which can be adjusted using stage 43 and knob 53, that move the beam 602 parallel to beam 601 in its way towards 61.
A problem for both FD-LCI in the embodiments in
As an inventive low cost solution, the present disclosure proposes a direct provision of a signal linear in optical frequency, when the measuring signal 7 is delivered in analogue format.
Let us suppose that the tuneable source 13 uses a tunable filter or is a low cost laser diode ramped in current, as reported in the paper by J. Zheng mentioned above. In this case, only a few nanometers tuning bandwidth is achievable, but sufficient to determine a depth resolution better than tens of microns. More expensive sources can be used to achieve micron resolution. In both cases above, either using a tuneable filter o a ramped laser diode, an electrical signal modifies the optical frequency of the output optical signal. In both cases, the output frequency manifests a nonlinear dependence on the electrical input signal. When tuning the source 13 in the embodiments in
Normally, the CCD (CMOS) arrays are read using shift registers which determine that data is shifted to the output linearly in time, pixel by pixel. Such arrays are read using a clock which feeds a shift register which controls the successive reading of pixels. Such clock is proposed here to be altered in time slots. By successively reducing or increasing the time slot of clock time interval, during the reading time TR (adjusted for quieter spectrum to 1/F as shown in
Let us consider a single reflector in the object, 3.
For each integration cycle, 1/F, pixel data is taken out using the nonlinear clock 96.
Obviously, the procedures above, as illustrated by
The novel procedures according to the invention however help increasing the amplitude of the measuring signal 7 and in consequence, the sensitivity of the set-up. The larger the reference OPD value established for measurements, the better the improvement brought by applying the methods described in
As a first improvement, because the channeled spectrum reading frequency F, may be in the audible range, a rejection filter, 86, is placed on the signal 7, before being sent to band pass filters 82 and 84.
As another possible improvement, the signal output of the rejection filter, 86, is beaten with a locally generated signal. A beating sound, 88, is produced by beating the signal 7 coming out of the interrogator 6 with a sinusoidal signal of a chosen frequency, G, generated by a signal generator 87, using a mixer 85′. For instance, let us consider that the reading of the channeled spectrum is performed at F=100 Hz and that the spectral interrogator, 6, has the resolution to read up to 200 peaks in the channeled spectrum. This leads to a range of frequencies for the signal 7 between F and 20 kHz, where the maximum corresponds to an OPD value of 2001c. Let us say that the OPD value of interest, sought after, δz, is 201c For this OPD value, the channeled spectrum contains 20 peaks and therefore the signal 7 oscillates at fref=2 kHz. The generator 87 is adjusted to G=fref. In this way, when the OPD is increased, the frequency of the signal out of 85′ decreases from 2 kHz to zero when OPD reaches the value of reference, δz, and increases again from zero to 20−2=18 kHz, if continuing to increase the OPD. In this way, the process of searching for the desired audio signal requires bringing the audio frequency to zero.
A more refined adjustment can now be devised. Because deciding exactly where the frequency of signal 88 is zero is affected by errors, the OPD value is adjusted by knobs 5 or 5′ until the frequency of signal 88 reaches, let us say 1 kHz, either side of the value shown by measuring means, 5, as E. The band pass filter 82 is tuned on 1 kHz and drives an LED or an analogue ammeter, and maxima are achieved for two positions of the adjusting means cvorresponding to values shown by the measuring means, 5, as E1 and E2. Let us say that OPD is continuously increased and E1 corresponds to the first value of OPD when 1 kHz is obtained, corresponding to an OPD matching δz, then the frequency of signal 88 decreases, goes through zero and by continuing the increase in the OPD, the frequency of signal 88 increases from zero to 1 kHz at E2(when the OPD is −δz). Then, the unknown length, E value can be determined more exactly, as (E1+E2)/2.
A frequency to amplitude converter, 89 could drive another needle meter, 95′, or a digital meter, or a display unit, 93′, where the colour suggests the strength of the signal. This is useful when the frequency of the channeled spectrum is higher than the audible range and when using the mixer 85′ which provides the same pitch, irrespective if the frequency of the signal 7 is lower or higher than the frequency of the signal generated by generator 87. The frequency to amplitude convertor 89 helps the user understand the absolute direction of OPD change while following the pitch of sound emitted by 94 after mixer 85′.
A related application is that of monitoring the movement of heart walls in organisms. Such organisms could be larvae, embryos, animals, humans. The beating rate can be easily translated into sound.
Let us consider that in a fly embryo, the heart, object 3 in the embodiments above, moves by 100 microns. Due to a limited number of pixels in the array 63, or limited number of frequency steps in the tuning of the frequency of the optical source, 13, the axial range of the FD-LCI system is limited. Let us say that the axial range is limited to 1 mm. For a coherence length of 10 microns, an OPD=1 mm will create 100 peaks in the channeled spectrum while the heart movement will correspond to a change in the number of peaks by 10. For a reading of the linear array 63 at 20 kHz (selected higher than the maximum audible frequency), the frequencies generated by reading the array 63 will be from 20 kHz to 2 MHz. The heart wall 3 may be at any OPD value within the 1 mm range, let us say that it is in the middle, at 0.5 mm, i.e. the frequency generated during the channeled spectrum reading is 1 MHz. A change in the OPD due to the heart wall movement will lead to a change of the frequency of 1 MHz by approximately 200 kHz (a change of 10 peaks, read at 20 kHz). Beating the photodetector array signal, 7, with a sinusoidal signal generated by 87, of Fref=1 MHz, in the mixer 85′, will lead to a signal 88, pulsating at a frequency difference of 0 to 200 kHz. When fed to loudspeakers, 92 and 94, a variable pitch will be heard in 94, with frequencies from zero to 20 kHz, while 92 will deliver blips when the frequency coincides to that of the narrow band filter 82, with pauses followed again by the same succession of frequencies when the heart returns to the initial position. If the embryo 3 moves axially to a different settled axial position, by changing the value of Fref, the new position is identified and monitoring can start again. The process of retuning Fref is here equivalent to finding the new axial position of the gate in TD-LCI.
For enhanced sensitivity, the blocks 81 and 83 can be equipped with zero crossing circuits. Such circuits generate a narrow pulse anytime the incoming signal crosses the voltage value of zero. This can then be transformed into a sinusoidal signal with repetition frequency determined by the inverse of time interval from a zero crossing to the next. In this way, the frequency of the signal heard in 92 and 94 is strictly proportional to the repetition in the channeled spectrum and the signal amplitude does not depend on the amplitude of the channeled spectrum. Sometimes, without such zero crossing circuits, the amplitude of the channeled spectrum is so high that saturation may occur which will distort the sound produced by the loudspeakers 92 and 94. Irrespective of the amplitude of the incoming signal, the zero crossing sensing blocks 81, 83, will generate signals of constant amplitude and frequency depending on the repetition of the input signal only.
Obviously, for those skilled in the art, where splitters are in bulk, they could equally be in fiber and vice versa. Focusing elements throughout the disclosure could be curved mirrors or lenses.
Thus, it has been apparent that there has been provided, in accordance with the present invention an apparatus which fully satisfies the means, objects and advantages set forth hereinbefore.
Therefore, having described specific embodiments of the present invention, it will be understood that alternatives, modifications and variations thereof may be suggested by those skilled in the art.