Fig. 1. Equipment configuration for stereo-DPIV flow visualization viewed from
above (xz plane). The laser light sheet (shown in blue) is positioned
in the center of the flow tank. Two cameras are placed at a wide angle
relative to the laser light sheet (A). The thick black arrow (A) represents
wake flow, which is shown with a relatively large lateral trajectory angle
(i.e. high magnitude of W, which is flow in the z dimension)
to illustrate differences between the field of view of the two cameras. The
red and green dotted lines and arrows for the left and right cameras,
respectively, represent the different fields of view of each camera and the
resulting two-dimensional views of flow movement in opposite directions. Each
camera's lens is tilted relative to the camera (B) in the Scheimpflüg
configuration so that the light sheet plane, the image plane and the lens
principal plane intersect at a common line (depicted here as an orange
circle), and the plane of best focus is the light sheet plane. The
Scheimpflüg configuration results in a clear and sharp image of particles
illuminated by the light sheet, despite the large camera angles. See Materials
and methods for more details.