Patents by Inventor Yau Y. Hung

Yau Y. Hung has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 6606160
    Abstract: An electronic shearography system can measure deformation of an object and/or test the object for defects. Two laterally sheared images of the same object are produced by reflecting coherent light from the object, and directing rays, originating from different points on the object, into an image sensor. The rays become collinear, or nearly so, before entering the image sensor, where they produce a recordable interference pattern having a relatively low spatial frequency. The shearing effect comes from two mirrors, positioned to reflect light from the object. One mirror is partially reflective and the other mirror is totally reflective. The mirrors are arranged such that two laterally sheared images are formed, and the arrangement eliminates the need for further optical elements in performing the shearing. Thus, the invention simplifies the optical system, and increases its efficiency.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 12, 1999
    Date of Patent: August 12, 2003
    Inventor: Yau Y. Hung
  • Patent number: 5011280
    Abstract: A test object is analyzed electronically, i.e. without the use of photographic film. The invention generates a pair of laterally-displaced images of the object which interfere with each other to produce a pattern that can be recorded without a high-resolution detector. The object is illuminated with at least partially coherent light. Reflected light from the object is directed through a birefringent material, a lens system, a polarizer, and then to an image detector, such as a video camera. The birefringent material causes non-parallel beams originating from a unique pair of points on the object to become nearly parallel, and orthogonally polarized. The polarizer modifies the polarization of the parallel beams so that they will interfere with each other. Because the intefering light beams are nearly parallel, the spatial frequency of the interference pattern is sufficiently low that the pattern can be recorded by a low-resolution detector, such as a video camera.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 23, 1989
    Date of Patent: April 30, 1991
    Inventor: Yau Y. Hung
  • Patent number: 5004345
    Abstract: This invention includes a method and apparatus for nondestructive testing of objects. The invention concerns a method of practicing shearography, i.e. forming two laterally-displaced images of the test object and causing these images to interfere. The invention includes the steps of directing a beam of coherent light onto the object and directing the reflected light onto a detector, such as a photographic film. A pair of lenses, laterally-displaced from each other, are placed between the object and the detector. Both lenses produce an image of the object at the plane of the detector, and because the lenses are spaced apart, the images produced are also spaced apart. In other words, the dual lens system causes two images from two different regions on the surface of the object to meet at the image plane. These images interfere with each other to form a speckle pattern. When the object is deformed, the speckle pattern changes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 5, 1988
    Date of Patent: April 2, 1991
    Inventor: Yau Y. Hung
  • Patent number: 4887899
    Abstract: A test object is analyzed electronically, i.e. without the use of photographic film. The invention generates a pair of laterally-displaced images of the object which interfere with each other to produce a pattern that can be recorded without a high-resolution detector. The object is illuminated with at least partially coherent light. Reflected light from the object is directed through a birefringent material, a lens system, a polarizer, and then to an image detector, such as a video camera. The birefringent material causes non-parallel beams originating from a unique pair of points on the object to become nearly parallel, and orthogonally polarized. The polarizer modifies the polarization of the parallel beams so that they will interfere with each other. Because the interfering light beams are nearly parallel, the spatial frequency of the interference pattern is sufficiently low that the pattern can be recorded by a low-resolution detector, such as a video camera.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 7, 1987
    Date of Patent: December 19, 1989
    Inventor: Yau Y. Hung
  • Patent number: 4620223
    Abstract: Object deformations are analyzed by recording interferometric images using a television camera. The camera's photosensitive recording cathode is successively exposed to interferometric images of the object, respectively before and after a stress is applied to the object, while the camera's scanning beam is blanked out in order to record a composite image having fringe families arrayed as a function of the deformation of the object. Subsequent scanning of the cathode produces video signals representing variations of intensity in the superimposed illumination patterns of the composite image. The video signals may be digitized, analyzed and displayed on a cathode ray tube.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 21, 1984
    Date of Patent: October 28, 1986
    Assignee: Industrial Holographics, Inc.
    Inventors: Richard E. Haskell, Yau Y. Hung
  • 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