Patents Assigned to Dr. Ralph M. Grant Engineering Consultants, Inc.
  • Patent number: 4139302
    Abstract: To obtain a photographic record of an object surface having superimposed interference fringes arrayed as a function of the deformation which results in the object from an applied stress, which may be mechanical, thermal, or the like, the object is first illuminated with coherent light. The illuminated surface is then photographed with a camera having an optical wedge disposed over half of its lens to record two slightly displaced overlapping images of the object on the camera film. The object is then stressed by changing the ambient temperature or pressure or other mechanical loading, and the undeveloped film is exposed to a second set of overlapping images. The developed photograph contains a set of equal amplitude fringes representing the interference pattern between the two fringe sets generated by the two exposures and arrayed as a function of the strain in the object as a result of the stress.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 17, 1977
    Date of Patent: February 13, 1979
    Assignee: Dr. Ralph M. Grant Engineering Consultants, Inc.
    Inventors: Yau Y. Hung, Ralph M. Grant
  • Patent number: 4125314
    Abstract: To form a hologram of a section of an object surface one end of each of a pair of elongated, flexible, optical fibers is illuminated with a laser beam through an optical mechanism which allows adjustment of the amount of light that falls on each of the fiber ends. The opposite end of one of the fibers is disposed adjacent to the object of which the hologram is to be formed so that the light output of that fiber diffuses and illuminates the relevant surface. A photographic plate is disposed to receive light reflected from the object surface as well as a reference beam radiating from the output end of the other fiber. A photodetector device receives a portion of the reference beam at one input and a portion of the object beam at another input and provides a visual indication of the relative intensity of the beams. The input to the fiber elements is adjusted to achieve the desired beam ratio for forming a hologram.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 5, 1977
    Date of Patent: November 14, 1978
    Assignee: Dr. Ralph M. Grant Engineering Consultants, Inc.
    Inventors: Richard E. Haskell, Ralph M. Grant