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Length measurement

Length measurement, distance measurement, or range measurement (ranging) refers to the many ways in which length, distance, or range can be measured. The most commonly used approaches are the rulers, followed by transit-time methods and the interferometer methods based upon the speed of light.

For objects such as crystals and diffraction gratings, diffraction is used with X-rays and electron beams. Measurement techniques for three-dimensional structures very small in every dimension use specialized instruments such as ion microscopy coupled with intensive computer modeling.

Standard rulers edit

The ruler the simplest kind of length measurement tool: lengths are defined by printed marks or engravings on a stick. The metre was initially defined using a ruler before more accurate methods became available.

Gauge blocks are a common method for precise measurement or calibration of measurement tools.

For small or microscopic objects, microphotography where the length is calibrated using a graticule can be used. A graticule is a piece that has lines for precise lengths etched into it. Graticules may be fitted into the eyepiece or they may be used on the measurement plane.

Transit-time measurement edit

The basic idea behind a transit-time measurement of length is to send a signal from one end of the length to be measured to the other, and back again. The time for the round trip is the transit time Δt, and the length ℓ is then 2ℓ = Δt*"v",with v the speed of propagation of the signal, assuming that is the same in both directions. If light is used for the signal, its speed depends upon the medium in which it propagates; in SI units the speed is a defined value c0 in the reference medium of classical vacuum. Thus, when light is used in a transit-time approach, length measurements are not subject to knowledge of the source frequency (apart from possible frequency dependence of the correction to relate the medium to classical vacuum), but are subject to the error in measuring transit times, in particular, errors introduced by the response times of the pulse emission and detection instrumentation. An additional uncertainty is the refractive index correction relating the medium used to the reference vacuum, taken in SI units to be the classical vacuum. A refractive index of the medium larger than one slows the light.

Transit-time measurement underlies most radio navigation systems for boats and aircraft, for example, radar and the nearly obsolete Long Range Aid to Navigation LORAN-C. For example, in one radar system, pulses of electromagnetic radiation are sent out by the vehicle (interrogating pulses) and trigger a response from a responder beacon. The time interval between the sending and the receiving of a pulse is monitored and used to determine a distance. In the global positioning system a code of ones and zeros is emitted at a known time from multiple satellites, and their times of arrival are noted at a receiver along with the time they were sent (encoded in the messages). Assuming the receiver clock can be related to the synchronized clocks on the satellites, the transit time can be found and used to provide the distance to each satellite. Receiver clock error is corrected by combining the data from four satellites.[1]

Such techniques vary in accuracy according to the distances over which they are intended for use. For example, LORAN-C is accurate to about 6 km, GPS about 10 m, enhanced GPS, in which a correction signal is transmitted from terrestrial stations (that is, differential GPS (DGPS)) or via satellites (that is, Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS)) can bring accuracy to a few metres or < 1 metre, or, in specific applications, tens of centimetres. Time-of-flight systems for robotics (for example, Laser Detection and Ranging LADAR and Light Detection and Ranging LIDAR) aim at lengths of 10–100 m and have an accuracy of about 5–10 mm.[2]

Interferometer measurements edit

 
Measuring a length in wavelengths of light using an interferometer.

In many practical circumstances, and for precision work, measurement of dimension using transit-time measurements is used only as an initial indicator of length and is refined using an interferometer.[3][4] Generally, transit time measurements are preferred for longer lengths, and interferometers for shorter lengths.[5]

The figure shows schematically how length is determined using a Michelson interferometer: the two panels show a laser source emitting a light beam split by a beam splitter (BS) to travel two paths. The light is recombined by bouncing the two components off a pair of corner cubes (CC) that return the two components to the beam splitter again to be reassembled. The corner cube serves to displace the incident from the reflected beam, which avoids some complications caused by superposing the two beams.[6] The distance between the left-hand corner cube and the beam splitter is compared to that separation on the fixed leg as the left-hand spacing is adjusted to compare the length of the object to be measured.

In the top panel the path is such that the two beams reinforce each other after reassembly, leading to a strong light pattern (sun). The bottom panel shows a path that is made a half wavelength longer by moving the left-hand mirror a quarter wavelength further away, increasing the path difference by a half wavelength. The result is the two beams are in opposition to each other at reassembly, and the recombined light intensity drops to zero (clouds). Thus, as the spacing between the mirrors is adjusted, the observed light intensity cycles between reinforcement and cancellation as the number of wavelengths of path difference changes, and the observed intensity alternately peaks (bright sun) and dims (dark clouds). This behavior is called interference and the machine is called an interferometer. By counting fringes it is found how many wavelengths long the measured path is compared to the fixed leg. In this way, measurements are made in units of wavelengths λ corresponding to a particular atomic transition. The length in wavelengths can be converted to a length in units of metres if the selected transition has a known frequency f. The length as a certain number of wavelengths λ is related to the metre using λ = c0 / f. With c0 a defined value of 299,792,458 m/s, the error in a measured length in wavelengths is increased by this conversion to metres by the error in measuring the frequency of the light source.

By using sources of several wavelengths to generate sum and difference beat frequencies, absolute distance measurements become possible.[7][8][9]

This methodology for length determination requires a careful specification of the wavelength of the light used, and is one reason for employing a laser source where the wavelength can be held stable. Regardless of stability, however, the precise frequency of any source has linewidth limitations.[10] Other significant errors are introduced by the interferometer itself; in particular: errors in light beam alignment, collimation and fractional fringe determination.[5][11] Corrections also are made to account for departures of the medium (for example, air)[12] from the reference medium of classical vacuum. Resolution using wavelengths is in the range of ΔL/L ≈ 10−9 – 10−11 depending upon the length measured, the wavelength and the type of interferometer used.[11]

The measurement also requires careful specification of the medium in which the light propagates. A refractive index correction is made to relate the medium used to the reference vacuum, taken in SI units to be the classical vacuum. These refractive index corrections can be found more accurately by adding frequencies, for example, frequencies at which propagation is sensitive to the presence of water vapor. This way non-ideal contributions to the refractive index can be measured and corrected for at another frequency using established theoretical models.

It may be noted again, by way of contrast, that the transit-time measurement of length is independent of any knowledge of the source frequency, except for a possible dependence of the correction relating the measurement medium to the reference medium of classical vacuum, which may indeed depend on the frequency of the source. Where a pulse train or some other wave-shaping is used, a range of frequencies may be involved.

Diffraction measurements edit

For small objects, different methods are used that also depend upon determining size in units of wavelengths. For instance, in the case of a crystal, atomic spacings can be determined using X-ray diffraction.[13] The present best value for the lattice parameter of silicon, denoted a, is:[14]

a = 543.102 0504(89) × 10−12 m,

corresponding to a resolution of ΔL/L ≈ 3 × 10−10. Similar techniques can provide the dimensions of small structures repeated in large periodic arrays like a diffraction grating.[15]

Such measurements allow the calibration of electron microscopes, extending measurement capabilities. For non-relativistic electrons in an electron microscope, the de Broglie wavelength is:[16]

 

with V the electrical voltage drop traversed by the electron, me the electron mass, e the elementary charge, and h the Planck constant. This wavelength can be measured in terms of inter-atomic spacing using a crystal diffraction pattern, and related to the metre through an optical measurement of the lattice spacing on the same crystal. This process of extending calibration is called metrological traceability.[17] The use of metrological traceability to connect different regimes of measurement is similar to the idea behind the cosmic distance ladder for different ranges of astronomical length. Both calibrate different methods for length measurement using overlapping ranges of applicability.[18]

Far and moving targets edit

Ranging is technique that measures distance or slant range from the observer to a target, especially a far and moving target.

Active methods use unilateral transmission and passive reflection. Active rangefinding methods include laser (lidar), radar, sonar, and ultrasonic rangefinding.

Other devices which measure distance using trigonometry are stadiametric, coincidence and stereoscopic rangefinders. Older methodologies that use a set of known information (usually distance or target sizes) to make the measurement, have been in regular use since the 18th century.

Special ranging makes use of actively synchronized transmission and travel time measurements. The time difference between several received signals is used to determine exact distances (upon multiplication by the speed of light). This principle is used in satellite navigation. In conjunction with a standardized model of the Earth's surface, a location on that surface may be determined with high accuracy. Ranging methods without accurate time synchronization of the receiver are called pseudorange, used, for example, in GPS positioning.

With other systems ranging is obtained from passive radiation measurements only: the noise or radiation signature of the object generates the signal that is used to determine range. This asynchronous method requires multiple measurements to obtain a range by taking multiple bearings instead of appropriate scaling of active pings, otherwise the system is just capable of providing a simple bearing from any single measurement.

Combining several measurements in a time sequence leads to tracking and tracing. A commonly used term for residing terrestrial objects is surveying.

Other techniques edit

Measuring dimensions of localized structures (as opposed to large arrays of atoms like a crystal), as in modern integrated circuits, is done using the scanning electron microscope. This instrument bounces electrons off the object to be measured in a high vacuum enclosure, and the reflected electrons are collected as a photodetector image that is interpreted by a computer. These are not transit-time measurements, but are based upon comparison of Fourier transforms of images with theoretical results from computer modeling. Such elaborate methods are required because the image depends on the three-dimensional geometry of the measured feature, for example, the contour of an edge, and not just upon one- or two-dimensional properties. The underlying limitations are the beam width and the wavelength of the electron beam (determining diffraction), determined, as already discussed, by the electron beam energy.[19] The calibration of these scanning electron microscope measurements is tricky, as results depend upon the material measured and its geometry. A typical wavelength is 0.5 Å, and a typical resolution is about 4 nm.

Other small dimension techniques are the atomic force microscope, the focused ion beam and the helium ion microscope. Calibration is attempted using standard samples measured by transmission electron microscope (TEM).[20]

Nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy (NOESY) is a specialized type of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy where distances between atoms can be measured. It is based on the effect where nuclear spin cross-relaxation after excitation by a radio pulse depends on the distance between the nuclei. Unlike spin-spin coupling, NOE propagates through space and does not require that the atoms are connected by bonds, so it is a true distance measurement instead of a chemical measurement. Unlike diffraction measurements, NOESY does not require a crystalline sample, but is done in solution state and can be applied to substances that are difficult to crystallize.

Astronomical distance measurement edit

 

The cosmic distance ladder (also known as the extragalactic distance scale) is the succession of methods by which astronomers determine the distances to celestial objects. A direct distance measurement of an astronomical object is possible only for those objects that are "close enough" (within about a thousand parsecs) to Earth. The techniques for determining distances to more distant objects are all based on various measured correlations between methods that work at close distances and methods that work at larger distances. Several methods rely on a standard candle, which is an astronomical object that has a known luminosity.

The ladder analogy arises because no single technique can measure distances at all ranges encountered in astronomy. Instead, one method can be used to measure nearby distances, a second can be used to measure nearby to intermediate distances, and so on. Each rung of the ladder provides information that can be used to determine the distances at the next higher rung.

Other systems of units edit

In some systems of units, unlike the current SI system, lengths are fundamental units (for example, wavelengths in the older SI units and bohrs in atomic units) and are not defined by times of transit. Even in such units, however, the comparison of two lengths can be made by comparing the two transit times of light along the lengths. Such time-of-flight methodology may or may not be more accurate than the determination of a length as a multiple of the fundamental length unit.

List of devices edit

Contact devices edit

Non-contact devices edit

Based on time-of-flight edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ A brief rundown is found at Donald Clausing (2006). "Receiver clock correction". The Aviator's Guide to Navigation (4th ed.). McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 978-0-07-147720-8.
  2. ^ Robert B Fisher; Kurt Konolige (2008). "§22.1.4: Time-of-flight range sensors". In Bruno Siciliano; Oussama Khatib (eds.). Springer handbook of robotics. Springer. pp. 528 ff. ISBN 978-3540239574.
  3. ^ For an overview, see for example, Walt Boyes (2008). "Interferometry and transit-time methods". Instrumentation reference book. Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-7506-8308-1.
  4. ^ An example of a system combining the pulse and interferometer methods is described by Jun Ye (2004). (PDF). Optics Letters. 29 (10): 1153–1155. Bibcode:2004OptL...29.1153Y. doi:10.1364/ol.29.001153. PMID 15182016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-05-04. Retrieved 2011-11-30.
  5. ^ a b René Schödel (2009). "Chapter 15: Length and size". In Tōru Yoshizawa (ed.). Handbook of optical metrology: principles and applications. Vol. 10. CRC Press. p. 366. Bibcode:2009homp.book.....Y. ISBN 978-0-8493-3760-4.
  6. ^ The corner cube reflects the incident light in a parallel path that is displaced from the beam incident upon the corner cube. That separation of incident and reflected beams reduces some technical difficulties introduced when the incident and reflected beams are on top of each other. For a discussion of this version of the Michelson interferometer and other types of interferometer, see Joseph Shamir (1999). "§8.7 Using corner cubes". Optical systems and processes. SPIE Press. pp. 176 ff. ISBN 978-0-8194-3226-1.
  7. ^ Jesse Zheng (2005). Optical Frequency-Modulated Continuous-Wave (FMCW) Interferometry. Springer. Bibcode:2005ofmc.book.....Z. ISBN 978-0-387-23009-2.
  8. ^ SK Roy (2010). "§4.4 Basic principles of electronic distance measurement". Fundamentals of Surveying (2nd ed.). PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd. pp. 62 ff. ISBN 978-81-203-4198-2.
  9. ^ W Whyte; R Paul (1997). "§7.3 Electromagnetic distance measurement". Basic Surveying (4th ed.). Laxton's. pp. 136 ff. ISBN 978-0-7506-1771-0.
  10. ^ An atomic transition is affected by disturbances, such as collisions with other atoms and frequency shifts from atomic motion due to the Doppler effect, leading to a range of frequencies for the transition referred to as a linewidth. Corresponding to the uncertainty in frequency is an uncertainty in wavelength. In contrast, the speed of light in ideal vacuum is not dependent upon frequency at all.
  11. ^ a b A discussion of interferometer errors is found in the article cited above: Miao Zhu; John L Hall (1997). "Chapter 11: Precise wavelength measurements of tunable lasers". In Thomas Lucatorto; et al. (eds.). Experimental method in the physical sciences. Academic Press. pp. 311 ff. ISBN 978-0-12-475977-0.
  12. ^ For example, the index of refraction of air can be found based upon entering a wavelength in vacuum into the calculator provided by NIST: "Refractive index of air calculator". Engineering metrology toolbox. NIST. September 23, 2010. Retrieved 2011-12-08.
  13. ^ Peter J. Mohr; Barry N. Taylor; David B. Newell (2008). "CODATA recommended values of the fundamental physical constants: 2006". Rev Mod Phys. 80 (2): 633–730. arXiv:0801.0028. Bibcode:2008RvMP...80..633M. doi:10.1103/revmodphys.80.633. See section 8: Measurements involving silicon crystals, p. 46.
  14. ^ "Lattice parameter of silicon". The NIST reference on constants, units and uncertainty. National Institute of Standards and Technology. Retrieved 2011-04-04.
  15. ^ A discussion of various types of gratings is found in Abdul Al-Azzawi (2006). "§3.2 Diffraction gratings". Physical optics: principles and practices. CRC Press. pp. 46 ff. ISBN 978-0-8493-8297-0.
  16. ^ "Electron wavelength and relativity". High-resolution electron microscopy (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. 2009. p. 16. ISBN 978-0-19-955275-7.
  17. ^ See "Metrological traceability". BIPM. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  18. ^ Mark H. Jones; Robert J. Lambourne; David John Adams (2004). An introduction to galaxies and cosmology. Cambridge University Press. pp. 88 ff. ISBN 978-0-521-54623-2. Relating one step on the distance ladder to another involves a process of calibration, that is, the use of an established method of measurement to give absolute meaning to the relative measurements provided by some other method.
  19. ^ Michael T. Postek (2005). "Photomask critical dimension metrology in the scanning electron microscope". In Syed Rizvi (ed.). Handbook of photomask manufacturing technology. CRC Press. pp. 457 ff. ISBN 978-0-8247-5374-0. and Harry J. Levinson (2005). "Chapter 9: Metrology". Principles of lithography (2nd ed.). SPIE Press. pp. 313 ff. ISBN 978-0-8194-5660-1.
  20. ^ NG Orji; Garcia-Gutierrez; Bunday; Bishop; Cresswell; Allen; Allgair; et al. (2007). Archie, Chas N (ed.). "TEM calibration methods for critical dimension standards" (PDF). Proceedings of SPIE. Metrology, Inspection, and Process Control for Microlithography XXI. 6518: 651810. Bibcode:2007SPIE.6518E..10O. doi:10.1117/12.713368. S2CID 54698571.[permanent dead link]

Further reading edit

  • Rüeger, J. M. (1996). Electronic Distance Measurement. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-80233-1. ISBN 978-3-540-61159-2.

This article incorporates material from the Citizendium article "Metre (unit)", which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License but not under the GFDL.

length, measurement, range, estimation, redirects, here, confused, with, interval, estimation, broader, coverage, this, topic, dimensional, measurement, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, german, 2021, click, sho. Range estimation redirects here Not to be confused with Interval estimation For broader coverage of this topic see Dimensional measurement You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German May 2021 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 8 929 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Entfernungsmessung see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Entfernungsmessung to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Length measurement distance measurement or range measurement ranging refers to the many ways in which length distance or range can be measured The most commonly used approaches are the rulers followed by transit time methods and the interferometer methods based upon the speed of light For objects such as crystals and diffraction gratings diffraction is used with X rays and electron beams Measurement techniques for three dimensional structures very small in every dimension use specialized instruments such as ion microscopy coupled with intensive computer modeling Contents 1 Standard rulers 2 Transit time measurement 3 Interferometer measurements 4 Diffraction measurements 5 Far and moving targets 6 Other techniques 6 1 Astronomical distance measurement 7 Other systems of units 8 List of devices 8 1 Contact devices 8 2 Non contact devices 8 2 1 Based on time of flight 9 See also 10 References 11 Further readingStandard rulers editThe ruler the simplest kind of length measurement tool lengths are defined by printed marks or engravings on a stick The metre was initially defined using a ruler before more accurate methods became available Gauge blocks are a common method for precise measurement or calibration of measurement tools For small or microscopic objects microphotography where the length is calibrated using a graticule can be used A graticule is a piece that has lines for precise lengths etched into it Graticules may be fitted into the eyepiece or they may be used on the measurement plane Transit time measurement editThe basic idea behind a transit time measurement of length is to send a signal from one end of the length to be measured to the other and back again The time for the round trip is the transit time Dt and the length ℓ is then 2ℓ Dt v with v the speed of propagation of the signal assuming that is the same in both directions If light is used for the signal its speed depends upon the medium in which it propagates in SI units the speed is a defined value c0 in the reference medium of classical vacuum Thus when light is used in a transit time approach length measurements are not subject to knowledge of the source frequency apart from possible frequency dependence of the correction to relate the medium to classical vacuum but are subject to the error in measuring transit times in particular errors introduced by the response times of the pulse emission and detection instrumentation An additional uncertainty is the refractive index correction relating the medium used to the reference vacuum taken in SI units to be the classical vacuum A refractive index of the medium larger than one slows the light Transit time measurement underlies most radio navigation systems for boats and aircraft for example radar and the nearly obsolete Long Range Aid to Navigation LORAN C For example in one radar system pulses of electromagnetic radiation are sent out by the vehicle interrogating pulses and trigger a response from a responder beacon The time interval between the sending and the receiving of a pulse is monitored and used to determine a distance In the global positioning system a code of ones and zeros is emitted at a known time from multiple satellites and their times of arrival are noted at a receiver along with the time they were sent encoded in the messages Assuming the receiver clock can be related to the synchronized clocks on the satellites the transit time can be found and used to provide the distance to each satellite Receiver clock error is corrected by combining the data from four satellites 1 Such techniques vary in accuracy according to the distances over which they are intended for use For example LORAN C is accurate to about 6 km GPS about 10 m enhanced GPS in which a correction signal is transmitted from terrestrial stations that is differential GPS DGPS or via satellites that is Wide Area Augmentation System WAAS can bring accuracy to a few metres or lt 1 metre or in specific applications tens of centimetres Time of flight systems for robotics for example Laser Detection and Ranging LADAR and Light Detection and Ranging LIDAR aim at lengths of 10 100 m and have an accuracy of about 5 10 mm 2 Interferometer measurements edit nbsp Measuring a length in wavelengths of light using an interferometer In many practical circumstances and for precision work measurement of dimension using transit time measurements is used only as an initial indicator of length and is refined using an interferometer 3 4 Generally transit time measurements are preferred for longer lengths and interferometers for shorter lengths 5 The figure shows schematically how length is determined using a Michelson interferometer the two panels show a laser source emitting a light beam split by a beam splitter BS to travel two paths The light is recombined by bouncing the two components off a pair of corner cubes CC that return the two components to the beam splitter again to be reassembled The corner cube serves to displace the incident from the reflected beam which avoids some complications caused by superposing the two beams 6 The distance between the left hand corner cube and the beam splitter is compared to that separation on the fixed leg as the left hand spacing is adjusted to compare the length of the object to be measured In the top panel the path is such that the two beams reinforce each other after reassembly leading to a strong light pattern sun The bottom panel shows a path that is made a half wavelength longer by moving the left hand mirror a quarter wavelength further away increasing the path difference by a half wavelength The result is the two beams are in opposition to each other at reassembly and the recombined light intensity drops to zero clouds Thus as the spacing between the mirrors is adjusted the observed light intensity cycles between reinforcement and cancellation as the number of wavelengths of path difference changes and the observed intensity alternately peaks bright sun and dims dark clouds This behavior is called interference and the machine is called an interferometer By counting fringes it is found how many wavelengths long the measured path is compared to the fixed leg In this way measurements are made in units of wavelengths l corresponding to a particular atomic transition The length in wavelengths can be converted to a length in units of metres if the selected transition has a known frequency f The length as a certain number of wavelengths l is related to the metre using l c0 f With c0 a defined value of 299 792 458 m s the error in a measured length in wavelengths is increased by this conversion to metres by the error in measuring the frequency of the light source By using sources of several wavelengths to generate sum and difference beat frequencies absolute distance measurements become possible 7 8 9 This methodology for length determination requires a careful specification of the wavelength of the light used and is one reason for employing a laser source where the wavelength can be held stable Regardless of stability however the precise frequency of any source has linewidth limitations 10 Other significant errors are introduced by the interferometer itself in particular errors in light beam alignment collimation and fractional fringe determination 5 11 Corrections also are made to account for departures of the medium for example air 12 from the reference medium of classical vacuum Resolution using wavelengths is in the range of DL L 10 9 10 11 depending upon the length measured the wavelength and the type of interferometer used 11 The measurement also requires careful specification of the medium in which the light propagates A refractive index correction is made to relate the medium used to the reference vacuum taken in SI units to be the classical vacuum These refractive index corrections can be found more accurately by adding frequencies for example frequencies at which propagation is sensitive to the presence of water vapor This way non ideal contributions to the refractive index can be measured and corrected for at another frequency using established theoretical models It may be noted again by way of contrast that the transit time measurement of length is independent of any knowledge of the source frequency except for a possible dependence of the correction relating the measurement medium to the reference medium of classical vacuum which may indeed depend on the frequency of the source Where a pulse train or some other wave shaping is used a range of frequencies may be involved Diffraction measurements editFor small objects different methods are used that also depend upon determining size in units of wavelengths For instance in the case of a crystal atomic spacings can be determined using X ray diffraction 13 The present best value for the lattice parameter of silicon denoted a is 14 a 543 102 0504 89 10 12 m dd corresponding to a resolution of DL L 3 10 10 Similar techniques can provide the dimensions of small structures repeated in large periodic arrays like a diffraction grating 15 Such measurements allow the calibration of electron microscopes extending measurement capabilities For non relativistic electrons in an electron microscope the de Broglie wavelength is 16 l e h 2 m e e V displaystyle lambda e frac h sqrt 2m e eV nbsp with V the electrical voltage drop traversed by the electron me the electron mass e the elementary charge and h the Planck constant This wavelength can be measured in terms of inter atomic spacing using a crystal diffraction pattern and related to the metre through an optical measurement of the lattice spacing on the same crystal This process of extending calibration is called metrological traceability 17 The use of metrological traceability to connect different regimes of measurement is similar to the idea behind the cosmic distance ladder for different ranges of astronomical length Both calibrate different methods for length measurement using overlapping ranges of applicability 18 Far and moving targets editRanging is technique that measures distance or slant range from the observer to a target especially a far and moving target Active methods use unilateral transmission and passive reflection Active rangefinding methods include laser lidar radar sonar and ultrasonic rangefinding Other devices which measure distance using trigonometry are stadiametric coincidence and stereoscopic rangefinders Older methodologies that use a set of known information usually distance or target sizes to make the measurement have been in regular use since the 18th century Special ranging makes use of actively synchronized transmission and travel time measurements The time difference between several received signals is used to determine exact distances upon multiplication by the speed of light This principle is used in satellite navigation In conjunction with a standardized model of the Earth s surface a location on that surface may be determined with high accuracy Ranging methods without accurate time synchronization of the receiver are called pseudorange used for example in GPS positioning With other systems ranging is obtained from passive radiation measurements only the noise or radiation signature of the object generates the signal that is used to determine range This asynchronous method requires multiple measurements to obtain a range by taking multiple bearings instead of appropriate scaling of active pings otherwise the system is just capable of providing a simple bearing from any single measurement Combining several measurements in a time sequence leads to tracking and tracing A commonly used term for residing terrestrial objects is surveying Other techniques editMeasuring dimensions of localized structures as opposed to large arrays of atoms like a crystal as in modern integrated circuits is done using the scanning electron microscope This instrument bounces electrons off the object to be measured in a high vacuum enclosure and the reflected electrons are collected as a photodetector image that is interpreted by a computer These are not transit time measurements but are based upon comparison of Fourier transforms of images with theoretical results from computer modeling Such elaborate methods are required because the image depends on the three dimensional geometry of the measured feature for example the contour of an edge and not just upon one or two dimensional properties The underlying limitations are the beam width and the wavelength of the electron beam determining diffraction determined as already discussed by the electron beam energy 19 The calibration of these scanning electron microscope measurements is tricky as results depend upon the material measured and its geometry A typical wavelength is 0 5 A and a typical resolution is about 4 nm Other small dimension techniques are the atomic force microscope the focused ion beam and the helium ion microscope Calibration is attempted using standard samples measured by transmission electron microscope TEM 20 Nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy NOESY is a specialized type of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy where distances between atoms can be measured It is based on the effect where nuclear spin cross relaxation after excitation by a radio pulse depends on the distance between the nuclei Unlike spin spin coupling NOE propagates through space and does not require that the atoms are connected by bonds so it is a true distance measurement instead of a chemical measurement Unlike diffraction measurements NOESY does not require a crystalline sample but is done in solution state and can be applied to substances that are difficult to crystallize Astronomical distance measurement edit This section is an excerpt from Cosmic distance ladder edit nbsp Light green boxes Technique applicable to star forming galaxies Light blue boxes Technique applicable to population II galaxies Light Purple boxes Geometric distance technique Light Red box The planetary nebula luminosity function technique is applicable to all populations of the Virgo Supercluster Solid black lines Well calibrated ladder step Dashed black lines Uncertain calibration ladder step The cosmic distance ladder also known as the extragalactic distance scale is the succession of methods by which astronomers determine the distances to celestial objects A direct distance measurement of an astronomical object is possible only for those objects that are close enough within about a thousand parsecs to Earth The techniques for determining distances to more distant objects are all based on various measured correlations between methods that work at close distances and methods that work at larger distances Several methods rely on a standard candle which is an astronomical object that has a known luminosity The ladder analogy arises because no single technique can measure distances at all ranges encountered in astronomy Instead one method can be used to measure nearby distances a second can be used to measure nearby to intermediate distances and so on Each rung of the ladder provides information that can be used to determine the distances at the next higher rung Other systems of units editIn some systems of units unlike the current SI system lengths are fundamental units for example wavelengths in the older SI units and bohrs in atomic units and are not defined by times of transit Even in such units however the comparison of two lengths can be made by comparing the two transit times of light along the lengths Such time of flight methodology may or may not be more accurate than the determination of a length as a multiple of the fundamental length unit List of devices editMain category Length distance or range measuring devices Contact devices edit Architect s scale Caliper Diagonal scale Engineer s scale Feeler gauge used in metal working to measure size of gaps Gauge blocks Gunter s chain Measuring rod Meter stick Metric scale Micrometer Opisometer or curvimeter Pacing surveying Ruler Stadimeter Surveyor s wheel Tape measure Thread pitch gauge Ultrasonic thickness gauge Yard stick Non contact devices edit RangingBased on time of flight edit Electronic distance meter Ultrasonic ranging module sonar echo sounding Radar distance measurement Laser rangefinder lidar time of flight cameraSee also editDistance based road exit numbers Linear referencing Meridian arc Milestone Rangefinder GPS indirect by runtime measurement of electromagnetic waves in the GHz range Hypsometer Interferometer Macrometer Odometer Position sensor Positioning system Standard ruler in astronomy Tachymeter Taximeter measure usually includes a time component as well Tellurometer Travelling microscope Angular measuring instrument Altimeter height Distance measuring equipment aviation Ellipsometry Imaging ellipsometry Frequency modulated continuous wave radar FMCW Length scale Low energy electron microscopy Orders of magnitude length Pulse Doppler radar Range ambiguity resolution Cosmic distance ladder Bradley A Fiske Dazzle camouflage Depression range finder Fire control system Range finder painting Rangefinding telemeter Slant range Tacheometry Telemeter chronograph TellurometerReferences edit A brief rundown is found at Donald Clausing 2006 Receiver clock correction The Aviator s Guide to Navigation 4th ed McGraw Hill Professional ISBN 978 0 07 147720 8 Robert B Fisher Kurt Konolige 2008 22 1 4 Time of flight range sensors In Bruno Siciliano Oussama Khatib eds Springer handbook of robotics Springer pp 528 ff ISBN 978 3540239574 For an overview see for example Walt Boyes 2008 Interferometry and transit time methods Instrumentation reference book Butterworth Heinemann p 89 ISBN 978 0 7506 8308 1 An example of a system combining the pulse and interferometer methods is described by Jun Ye 2004 Absolute measurement of a long arbitrary distance to less than an optical fringe PDF Optics Letters 29 10 1153 1155 Bibcode 2004OptL 29 1153Y doi 10 1364 ol 29 001153 PMID 15182016 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 05 04 Retrieved 2011 11 30 a b Rene Schodel 2009 Chapter 15 Length and size In Tōru Yoshizawa ed Handbook of optical metrology principles and applications Vol 10 CRC Press p 366 Bibcode 2009homp book Y ISBN 978 0 8493 3760 4 The corner cube reflects the incident light in a parallel path that is displaced from the beam incident upon the corner cube That separation of incident and reflected beams reduces some technical difficulties introduced when the incident and reflected beams are on top of each other For a discussion of this version of the Michelson interferometer and other types of interferometer see Joseph Shamir 1999 8 7 Using corner cubes Optical systems and processes SPIE Press pp 176 ff ISBN 978 0 8194 3226 1 Jesse Zheng 2005 Optical Frequency Modulated Continuous Wave FMCW Interferometry Springer Bibcode 2005ofmc book Z ISBN 978 0 387 23009 2 SK Roy 2010 4 4 Basic principles of electronic distance measurement Fundamentals of Surveying 2nd ed PHI Learning Pvt Ltd pp 62 ff ISBN 978 81 203 4198 2 W Whyte R Paul 1997 7 3 Electromagnetic distance measurement Basic Surveying 4th ed Laxton s pp 136 ff ISBN 978 0 7506 1771 0 An atomic transition is affected by disturbances such as collisions with other atoms and frequency shifts from atomic motion due to the Doppler effect leading to a range of frequencies for the transition referred to as a linewidth Corresponding to the uncertainty in frequency is an uncertainty in wavelength In contrast the speed of light in ideal vacuum is not dependent upon frequency at all a b A discussion of interferometer errors is found in the article cited above Miao Zhu John L Hall 1997 Chapter 11 Precise wavelength measurements of tunable lasers In Thomas Lucatorto et al eds Experimental method in the physical sciences Academic Press pp 311 ff ISBN 978 0 12 475977 0 For example the index of refraction of air can be found based upon entering a wavelength in vacuum into the calculator provided by NIST Refractive index of air calculator Engineering metrology toolbox NIST September 23 2010 Retrieved 2011 12 08 Peter J Mohr Barry N Taylor David B Newell 2008 CODATA recommended values of the fundamental physical constants 2006 Rev Mod Phys 80 2 633 730 arXiv 0801 0028 Bibcode 2008RvMP 80 633M doi 10 1103 revmodphys 80 633 See section 8 Measurements involving silicon crystals p 46 Lattice parameter of silicon The NIST reference on constants units and uncertainty National Institute of Standards and Technology Retrieved 2011 04 04 A discussion of various types of gratings is found in Abdul Al Azzawi 2006 3 2 Diffraction gratings Physical optics principles and practices CRC Press pp 46 ff ISBN 978 0 8493 8297 0 Electron wavelength and relativity High resolution electron microscopy 3rd ed Oxford University Press 2009 p 16 ISBN 978 0 19 955275 7 See Metrological traceability BIPM Retrieved 2011 04 10 Mark H Jones Robert J Lambourne David John Adams 2004 An introduction to galaxies and cosmology Cambridge University Press pp 88 ff ISBN 978 0 521 54623 2 Relating one step on the distance ladder to another involves a process of calibration that is the use of an established method of measurement to give absolute meaning to the relative measurements provided by some other method Michael T Postek 2005 Photomask critical dimension metrology in the scanning electron microscope In Syed Rizvi ed Handbook of photomask manufacturing technology CRC Press pp 457 ff ISBN 978 0 8247 5374 0 and Harry J Levinson 2005 Chapter 9 Metrology Principles of lithography 2nd ed SPIE Press pp 313 ff ISBN 978 0 8194 5660 1 NG Orji Garcia Gutierrez Bunday Bishop Cresswell Allen Allgair et al 2007 Archie Chas N ed TEM calibration methods for critical dimension standards PDF Proceedings of SPIE Metrology Inspection and Process Control for Microlithography XXI 6518 651810 Bibcode 2007SPIE 6518E 10O doi 10 1117 12 713368 S2CID 54698571 permanent dead link Further reading editRueger J M 1996 Electronic Distance Measurement Berlin Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg doi 10 1007 978 3 642 80233 1 ISBN 978 3 540 61159 2 This article incorporates material from the Citizendium article Metre unit which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3 0 Unported License but not under the GFDL Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Length measurement amp oldid 1184225945, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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