1 July 1992 Three-dimensional surface deformation measurement by a grating method applied to crack tips
Klaus Andresen, Birger Kamp, Reinhold Ritter
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Abstract
The three-dimensional coordinates of a cross grating fixed on a slightly curved surface are determined by stereo imaging using polynomial imaging functions. These functions transform each spatial point within a limited flat volume into adjoined points in the images of two stereo cameras. The same functions also solve the inverse problem: finding the spatial coordinates when the related image coordinates are given, provided the points were placed within the above mentioned volume when taking the photograph. The method is applied to crack tip propagation. The out-of-plane displacement of the surface and the plane strain tensor are determined for the 3-D coordinates of the grating in different load stages.
Klaus Andresen, Birger Kamp, and Reinhold Ritter "Three-dimensional surface deformation measurement by a grating method applied to crack tips," Optical Engineering 31(7), (1 July 1992). https://doi.org/10.1117/12.158915
Published: 1 July 1992
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CITATIONS
Cited by 11 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Cameras

3D image processing

Lenses

Inverse optics

3D modeling

Imaging systems

Inverse problems

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