Abstract

Single pulsed subtraction electronic speckle-shearing pattern interferometry is used to measure the time evolution of deformations induced by periodic impulse loading on a metal plate. This is accomplished with a stroboscopic system based on a pulsed laser and an interline-transfer CCD camera running at 60 frames/s. In a few seconds, a sequence of hundreds of interferograms is recorded with an effective sampling time interval of some tens of microseconds. We describe the experimental setup used to generate the transient deformation on the metal plate and also the synchronization of laser pulses and image acquisition. Several correlation fringe patterns are presented, showing the time evolution of the deformation. Finally, these data are used to calculate optical phase maps and displacement derivative fields for different times after the application of the dynamic load on the object.

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