Surface Inspection Tool for Optical Detection of Surface Defects
TBMG-16138
04/01/2013
- Content
The Space Shuttle Orbiter windows were damaged both by micrometeor impacts and by handling, and required careful inspection before they could be reused. The launch commit criteria required that no defect be deeper than a critical depth. The shuttle program used a refocus microscope to perform a quick pass/fail determination, and then followed up with mold impressions to better quantify any defect. However, the refocus microscope is slow and tedious to use due to its limited field of view, only focusing on one small area of glass at a time. Additionally, the unit is bulky and unable to be used in areas with tight access, such as defects near the window frame or on the glass inside the Orbiter due to interference with the dashboard. Bulky camera equipment was needed to acquire images for later processing and storage. The long depth of field of the refocus microscope provided crisp images of the defect, but didn’t provide the user with a feel for depth of the defect since all parts of the image appear in focus.
- Citation
- "Surface Inspection Tool for Optical Detection of Surface Defects," Mobility Engineering, April 1, 2013.