NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Frequency-Modulated, Continuous-Wave Laser Ranging Using Photon-Counting DetectorsOptical ranging is a problem of estimating the round-trip flight time of a phase- or amplitude-modulated optical beam that reflects off of a target. Frequency- modulated, continuous-wave (FMCW) ranging systems obtain this estimate by performing an interferometric measurement between a local frequency- modulated laser beam and a delayed copy returning from the target. The range estimate is formed by mixing the target-return field with the local reference field on a beamsplitter and detecting the resultant beat modulation. In conventional FMCW ranging, the source modulation is linear in instantaneous frequency, the reference-arm field has many more photons than the target-return field, and the time-of-flight estimate is generated by balanced difference- detection of the beamsplitter output, followed by a frequency-domain peak search. This work focused on determining the maximum-likelihood (ML) estimation algorithm when continuous-time photoncounting detectors are used. It is founded on a rigorous statistical characterization of the (random) photoelectron emission times as a function of the incident optical field, including the deleterious effects caused by dark current and dead time. These statistics enable derivation of the Cramér-Rao lower bound (CRB) on the accuracy of FMCW ranging, and derivation of the ML estimator, whose performance approaches this bound at high photon flux. The estimation algorithm was developed, and its optimality properties were shown in simulation. Experimental data show that it performs better than the conventional estimation algorithms used. The demonstrated improvement is a factor of 1.414 over frequency-domainbased estimation. If the target interrogating photons and the local reference field photons are costed equally, the optimal allocation of photons between these two arms is to have them equally distributed. This is different than the state of the art, in which the local field is stronger than the target return. The optimal processing of the photocurrent processes at the outputs of the two detectors is to perform log-matched filtering followed by a summation and peak detection. This implies that neither difference detection, nor Fourier-domain peak detection, which are the staples of the state-of-the-art systems, is optimal when a weak local oscillator is employed.
Document ID
20140002364
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Other - NASA Tech Brief
Authors
Erkmen, Baris I.
(California Inst. of Tech. Pasadena, CA, United States)
Barber, Zeb W.
(Montana State Univ. Billings, MT, United States)
Dahl, Jason
(Montana State Univ. Billings, MT, United States)
Date Acquired
March 26, 2014
Publication Date
January 1, 2014
Publication Information
Publication: NASA Tech Briefs, January 2014
Subject Category
Man/System Technology And Life Support
Lasers And Masers
Report/Patent Number
NPO-48866
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
No Preview Available