Publications by authors named "Peter J de Groot"

Lateral resolving power is a key performance attribute of Fizeau interferometers, confocal microscopes, interference microscopes, and other instruments measuring surface form and texture. Within a well-defined scope of applicability, limited by surface slope, texture, and continuity, a linear response model provides a starting point for characterizing spatial resolution under ideal conditions. Presently, the instrument transfer function (ITF) is a standardized way to quantify linear response to surface height variations as a function of spatial frequency.

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We propose a practical theoretical model of an interference microscope that includes the imaging properties of optical systems with partially coherent illumination. We show that the effects on measured topography of a spatially extended, monochromatic light source at low numerical apertures can be approximated in a simplified model that assumes spatially coherent light and a linear, locally shift-invariant transfer function that accounts for optical aberrations and the attenuation of diffracted plane wave amplitudes with increasing spatial frequencies. Simulation of instrument response using this model agrees with methods using numerical pupil-plane integration and with an experimental measurement of surface topography.

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This review gathers together 15 special topics in modern interferometric metrology representing a sampling of historical, current and future developments. The selected topics cover a wide range of applications, including distance and displacement measurement, the testing of optical components, interference microscopy for surface structure analysis, form and dimensional measurements of industrial parts, and recent applications in semiconductor manufacturing and consumer electronics. Techniques range from laser Fizeau systems to dynamic ellipsometry using polarized heterodyne interferometry.

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Extensor carpi radialis brevis (ECRB) transfer to the hamate bone is a novel procedure that offers a new surgical treatment option for select patients with midcarpal instability (MCI) who do not respond to conservative treatment. We present our early experience with this procedure. In total, 12 patients (13 wrists) were reviewed with a follow-up duration ranging from 1 to 6 years.

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High-performance data processing algorithms for phase-shifting interferometry accommodate adjustment errors in the phase shift increment as well as harmonic distortions in the interference signal. However, a widely overlooked error source is the combination of these two imperfections. Phase shift tuning errors increase the sensitivity of phase estimation algorithms to second-order and higher harmonics present in Fizeau interference signals.

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The measurement of flat optical components often presents difficulties because the presence of parallel surfaces generates multiple reflections that confuse conventional laser-based interferometers. These same parts have increasingly demanding surface finish tolerances as technologies improve over time, further complicating the metrology task. Here we describe an interferometric optical system for high-accuracy noncontact evaluation of the form and texture of precision flat surfaces based on an equal-optical-path geometry that uses extended, broadband illumination to reduce the influence of speckle noise, multiple reflections, and coherent artifacts by a factor of 10 when compared to laser-based systems.

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The midline of the ring finger is classically considered as the neural watershed between the median and ulnar nerve sensory territories on the palmar surfaces of the fingers. Variations of this division exist and may be explained by a communicating branch between the third and fourth common digital nerves. The palmar sensibility patterns of fingers were assessed with Semmes Weinstein filaments after either a complete median or an ulnar nerve transection in 43 patients.

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