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  Products Glossary of Technical Terms  

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Planar Doppler Velocimetry

 

“Planar Doppler velocimetry”, otherwise known as “Doppler global velocimetry (DGV)” measures two or three components of velocity on a plane illuminated by a laser light sheet. Like LDV, it detects the Doppler shift of light scattered by small particles; but unlike LDV, the measurement of the frequency shift is made spectroscopically using a high-resolution iodine gas cell, which acts as a frequency dependent filter with very high sensitivity. The intensity of the light from a given point in the object plane is attenuated in proportion to its Doppler shift. The image plane then contains gray levels proportional to the product of the local intensity of the illuminating light sheet and the Doppler shift. To remove the effects of variable illuminating beam intensity and other optical elements that might affect the observed intensity, a second camera records the unshifted image field, and the Doppler shifted image is normalized by the unshifted image, pixel-by-pixel. 

The velocity resolution of PDV is of order 1 m/s, so best application of it involves high-speed flows. The technique is appealing because, in principle, it involves only the measurement of pixel intensity readings. Three-dimensional vectors can be measured using stereoscopic viewing.

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