USE OF STELLATED APERTURES TO MINIMISE INTERNAL FORWARD REFLECTIONS IN STRAY LIGHT BAFFLES

Guillaume Dotreppe, Anthony Bergen, Lambert Tissot, Valéry Ann Jacobs

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference paper

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Abstract

An important aspect of photometry is the use of baffles to block stray light, such as light reflected of the walls and floor, or light from other sources, from reaching the detector. The detector will often be placed in a baffle tube to limit the field-of-view of the detector to a narrow field around the optical axis, and the tube itself will usually have internal apertures to block reflections from the sides of the tube. The inside edges of the internal apertures can forward diffract light onto the detector. In most cases this may be negligible, but for highest-accuracy applications may be significant. This paper describes a method to use stellation, i.e. introducing “teeth” to the inside edge of the internal apertures of a baffle tube, to reduce the forward diffraction by as much as 50 %.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCIE 2025 Midterm Meeting
Number of pages10
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 1 May 2025
EventCIE 2025 Scientific Conference of the Midterm Meeting - Vienna, Austria
Duration: 7 Jul 20259 Jul 2025

Conference

ConferenceCIE 2025 Scientific Conference of the Midterm Meeting
Country/TerritoryAustria
CityVienna
Period7/07/259/07/25

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