The present invention relates to an apparatus for reflecting a light beam to be parallel to the original incoming beam at a predetermined lateral distance dictated by the length of said apparatus.
Many optical applications require beam alignment and bore-sighting between several devices which offset in respect to each other, usually called parallax. Seldom, for small parallax, a corner reflector is used to redirect the line of sight from one device to the second one, keeping parallelism between incoming and outcoming lines of sight. A typical corner reflector consists of mutually perpendicular mirrors or flat surfaces to reflect waves parallel to the source but offset. In those cases where the offset between devices is relatively large, this approach is not practical since the corner cube tends to become very large. In prior art devices, a small section of a corner cube is built, having on one side a mirror and perpendicular to this mirror a roof-like mirror element is disposed in such a way that the three mirrors are perpendicular to each other. However, this device is very complicated to make in those instances where high accuracy is required and the beam could be distorted when reflected at the area of the intersection of mirrors in said roof-like element. Scientific and industrial laser applications frequently require inter-alignment between lasers at various wavelengths, sights sensitive to a specific bandwidth wavelength, and even radar performing systems. To overcome these wide requirements, it is preferable to design a mirror-based device with reflectivity over a wide spectral range.
The present invention was conceived in order to offer a solution for transferring lines of sights from one optical system to a second optical system which have an offset in between. It is the object of this invention to provide an apparatus that will transfer lines of sight from one device to the other with great accuracy and sufficient performance. Furthermore, this invention could be manufactured as one piece using diamond turning techniques, increasing its applicability and overcoming problems usually related to making such accurate optical devices. Objects and advantages of present invention will be unfolded from the description of broadly described embodiments that follow. To achieve the object in accordance of present invention, the apparatus is used to deflect an incoming beam into its aperture by 180 degrees and offset its exit aperture by an offset according to its mechanical design. The mechanical layout of disclosed art is based on an elongated mechanical basis with built-in four mirrors. Two mirrors are disposed as an input aperture on one end, and at the other end of said elongated mechanical basis—additional two mirrors are used as an exit aperture. The first two mirrors on input aperture will fold an incoming beam by 90 degrees and direct it towards the exit aperture at other end of said mechanical basis to be folded an additional 90 degrees to create a total deflection of 180 degrees. To achieve the objectives in accordance with the present invention, the said first two mirrors at the input aperture should be perpendicular to the mechanical basis and have an angular value between them of 45 degrees. At the other end, a mirror image of the input aperture is created with additional two mirrors with exactly the same specification of 45 degrees in between. Said apparatus is comprised from a set of two mirrors at 45 degrees to each other, mounted on one side of a longitudinal basis, and a second set of two mirrors identical to the first set, mounted on the other side of said longitudinal basis in a mirrored position with respect to said first set. The two said sets of mirrors are preferable machined perpendicularly to said longitudinal basis by diamond turning to achieve highest accuracy and a monolithic structure that being manufactured from a single metal piece is less sensitive to possible deformation due to heat stress. For enhanced reflectivity performance, the mirrors are potentially coated with reflective coating, optimized to best perform at a specific wavelengths' bandwidth.
To summarize, an optical device for deflecting and translating a beam is disclosed, wherein the deflection is 180 degrees and the translation value is dictated by the length of the mechanical system basis. The said deflection is achieved by two perpendicular mirrors to the basis on its one end, and additional two mirrors at its second end. The said two mirrors at input and output end of the mechanical basis have 45 degrees in between, and arranged in such a way that each pair is mirrored to each other. To meet the stringent optical tolerances, this device should be preferable machined using diamond turning technology that can make such a device from a single metal piece. Accordingly, the disclosed art provides an improved and unique beam retro-reflection device, preferable made as one monolithic metal piece.
For clarification, the various described embodiments are illustrated below. These figures are not drawn to scale and schematically describe the invention, but do not limit its applications.