Sapphire,BK7 corner cube 60mm prism
Corner cube prism has three mutually perpendicular surfaces and a hypotenuse face. Light entering through the hypotenuse is reflected by each of the three surfaces in turn and will emerge through the hypotenuse face parallel to the entering beam regardless of the orientation of the incident beam. For its special performance, it is often used to the distance measurement, optical signal process and laser interferometer.
Technical Parameters
1
|
Material
|
Bk7,B270, Fused Silica, Sapphire, IR Crystal etc
|
2
|
Dimension Tolerance
|
+/-0.15mm
|
3
|
Thickness Tolerance
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±0.05mm
|
4
|
Angle Tolerance
|
3 arc min
|
5
|
Surface Quality
|
10/5
|
6
|
Surface Flatness
|
lambda/6
|
7
|
Clear Aperture
|
>90%
|
8
|
Bevel
|
<0.3±45°
|
9
|
Coating
|
Upon requirement
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Feature:
Incident light deviates by 180 deg independently of the angle of incidence
Applications:
Plumb Level, Surveying, Alignment, Range finding, Optical Tooling, Distance finding, Distance measurement, Optical signal dispose, Optical signal process, Laser interferometer, Laser range finder, Fire detector, etc..
Description:
BK7 or UVFS Corner cube retroreflectors are designed to deviate incident light by 180 degrees independent of the angle of incidence. These prisms have 3 mirror surfaces making angles of 90 degrees to each other, juxtaposed to form the corner of a cube with the entrance face perpendicular to cube diagonal. All beams, independent of the direction of incidence, are reflected back. Corner cubes are used for high precision applications or with lasers working in very long distances.
The corner cube can reflect the incident light back its original source. It is used in length measurement system as its reflector. It has been designed for measuring the distance between the moon and the earth, when Apollo spaceship reached the moon, corner cube was set on the surface of the moon for scientific research use.
Retroreflection Prisms are used in applications where precision alignment is difficult or tedious. Retroflection Prisms reflect incident light back to the light source no matter the orientation of the Retroreflection Prism. Unlike an Optical Mirror, which needs to be at the normal angle of incidence in order to reflect light back to the source, a Retroreflection Prism can be oriented in any position so long as the light is hitting the entrance face. A Retroreflection Prism utilizes several total internal reflections to enable it to operate at even the most extreme angles of incidence.