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Streak camera based SLR receiver for two color atmospheric measurementsTo realize accurate two-color differential measurements, an image digitizing system with variable spatial resolution was designed, built, and integrated to a photon-counting picosecond streak camera, yielding a temporal scan resolution better than 300 femtosecond/pixel. The streak camera is configured to operate with 3 spatial channels; two of these support green (532 nm) and uv (355 nm) while the third accommodates reference pulses (764 nm) for real-time calibration. Critical parameters affecting differential timing accuracy such as pulse width and shape, number of received photons, streak camera/imaging system nonlinearities, dynamic range, and noise characteristics were investigated to optimize the system for accurate differential delay measurements. The streak camera output image consists of three image fields, each field is 1024 pixels along the time axis and 16 pixels across the spatial axis. Each of the image fields may be independently positioned across the spatial axis. Two of the image fields are used for the two wavelengths used in the experiment; the third window measures the temporal separation of a pair of diode laser pulses which verify the streak camera sweep speed for each data frame. The sum of the 16 pixel intensities across each of the 1024 temporal positions for the three data windows is used to extract the three waveforms. The waveform data is processed using an iterative three-point running average filter (10 to 30 iterations are used) to remove high-frequency structure. The pulse pair separations are determined using the half-max and centroid type analysis. Rigorous experimental verification has demonstrated that this simplified process provides the best measurement accuracy. To calibrate the receiver system sweep, two laser pulses with precisely known temporal separation are scanned along the full length of the sweep axis. The experimental measurements are then modeled using polynomial regression to obtain a best fit to the data. Data aggregation using normal point approach has provided accurate data fitting techniques and is found to be much more convenient than using the full rate single shot data. The systematic errors from this model have been found to be less than 3 ps for normal points.
Document ID
19940011100
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Varghese, Thomas K.
(Bendix Field Engineering Corp. Seabrook, MD, United States)
Clarke, Christopher
(Bendix Field Engineering Corp. Seabrook, MD, United States)
Oldham, Thomas
(Bendix Field Engineering Corp. Seabrook, MD, United States)
Selden, Michael
(Bendix Field Engineering Corp. Seabrook, MD, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 1993
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Goddard Space Flight Center, Eighth International Workshop on Laser Ranging Instrumentation
Subject Category
Instrumentation And Photography
Accession Number
94N15573
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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