Soltani, P.Darudi, A.Nehmetallah, G.Moradi, A. R.Amiri, J.2018-04-122018-04-1220161559-128Xhttp://hdl.handle.net/11693/36997In the last decade, the transport of intensity has been increasingly used in microscopy, wavefront sensing, and metrology. In this study, we verify by simulation and experiment the use of the transport of intensity equation (TIE) in the accurate testing of optical aspheric surfaces. Guided by simulation results and assuming that the experimental setup parameters and the conic constants are known, one can estimate an appropriate defocusing distance Äz that leads to an accurate solution of the TIE. In this paper, this method is verified through the construction of a nonnulled experiment for testing the 2D profile of an aspheric surface. The theoretical method and experimental results are compared to validate the results. Finally, to validate the TIE methodology, the phase distribution obtained by TIE is compared with the phase distribution obtained by a Shack-Hartmann sensor.EnglishAdaptive opticsOptical aspheric surfacePhase distributionShack-Hartmann sensorTheoretical methodsTransport of intensityTransport of intensity equation (TIE)Transport of intensity equationsWave-front sensingAsphericsAccurate Testing of Aspheric Surfaces Using the Transport of Intensity Equation by Properly Selecting the Defocusing DistanceArticle10.1364/AO.55.010067