Title: GEO Spacecraft Development
1 An Alternative Direct Detection Approach to
Doppler Winds that is Independent of Aerosol
Mixing Ratio and Transmitter Frequency
JitterBall Aerospace Technologies
Corp.Presented by Chris Grund
cgrund_at_ball.com, 303-939-7217Presented to
Space Winds Lidar Working GroupMiami,
Florida2/8/2007
2 3Optical Autocovariance Theory
Pulse Laser
Doppler Shift Due to wind
d
1
CH 3
Return spectrum from a Monochromatic source
From
CH 2
Prefilter
Atmosphere
CH 1
Receiver Telescope
Stepped
d
2
mirror
1
2
3
Data
System
Detector
Detector
Detector
V l Df c / (4 (d2-d1))
Measured as a fraction
Optical Autocovariance Wind Lidar OAWL Pronounced
ALL
Note Scale of molecuar and cycle of
autocovariance function are arbitraqry for
illustration
4OAWL Advantages
- Laser simplifications
- Injection seeding not necessary
- Shot to shot mode hopping no problem
- Passive Q-switch feasible no HV
- No 800 km coherence length LO needed
- No hardware correction for spacecraft V
- Receiver
- One system for whole atmosphere
- Aerosol and molecular in one
- No calibration dependence on targets
- Mixed aerosols, clouds, molecules OK
- No clean/dirty air calibration bias
- No absolute frequency lock to laser
- No absolute temperature controllers
- No spectral drift calibration requirement
OAWL does it ALL
5OAWL Combines/Augments the Best Traits of Both
Coherent and Incoherent Lidar Methods
6 7Demonstration System Architecture
8The Brassboard System
Channel Splitting Mirror
Alignment Camera and Monitor
3 Detector Assembly
PC Data System
3-Beam Interferometer Assembly
COTS Newtonian Receiver Telescope
Laser Controller
Receiver Field Stop
Laser Transmitter Assembly
0-Range, 0-Velocity Sampling Assembly
9Development Team
- Mick Cermak Lab and fabrication support,
experiment support and logistics - Dina Demara Data system software
- Doug Frazier brassboard mechanical design
- Dennis Gallagher final brassboard optical
design and modeling (left Ball in 06) - Chris Grund PI, system and experiment design,
signal processing, calibration, validation - Bob Pierce ongoing optical engineering,
experiment support - Ron Schwiesow proposed original concept
(retired from Ball 10/05) - Michelle Stephens Spaceborne performance
modeling - Steve Stone Procurement assistance, electronics
support - Internal RD funding support through Ray Demara
gratefully acknowledged
10 11Proof of Concept Test Range
12First light Experimental Intensity SNR
0-range 0-velocity sample
13First OAWL POC Wind Retrievals(December 2006)
1 m/s random error with 0.6 m/s bias
demonstrated with 0.3 s averaging and 3m range
resolution. Excellent fluctuation correlations.
Red Anemometer-OA cross correlation White
anemometer autocorrelation Blue cross
correlation for pure Gaussian noise distributions
14First Wind Retrievals- continued
- Statistically very different wind set (see
anemometer autocorrelation function) - again excellent fluctuation correlations
- OAWL brassboard 1.2 m/s random error, with
0.15 m/s bias (3m res, 0.3 s avg)
15- Preliminary
- OAWL Space Lidar Winds
- Performance Modeling
16Performance Requirements Addressed (so far)for
OAWL Space Wind Lidar Operation
17Preliminary OAWL System Performancefor
Spaceborne Operations
Conditions Wavelength 355 nm Pulse
Energy 550 mJ Pulse rate 50
Hz Receiver diameter 1m LOS angle with
vertical 450 Vector crossing angle
900 Horizontal resolution 350 km OPD
1 m System transmission
0.35 Alignment error 5 mR Background
bandwidth 35 pm Orbit altitude
400 km Vertical resolution 1
km Phenomenology CALIPSO model
Objective
Daytime
Nighttime
Altitude (km)
Demo Threshold
Horizontal Wind Velocity Error (m/s)
18 19Conclusions
- Optical Autocovariance Wind Lidar (OAWL) has
advantages for space operations - Potentially, one system DOES IT ALL, from and
boundary layer to free trop - Simpler laser
- Injection seeding not needed, passive Q-sw
feasible - single mode per pulse, but pulse to pulse
frequency hopping OK - No velocity calibration dependence on
aerosol/molecular backscatter mixing ratio - Laser coherence length only needs to exceed the
interferometer path length - Compatibility with secondary aerosol or chemical
species missions - First OAWL brassboard lidar completed, aligned,
and calibrated in 2006 - Developments ongoing, intercomparison campaign
sought (NOAA, NASA) - Successful, range-resolved atmospheric proof of
concept tests completed - Preliminary wind retrieval/calibration algorithms
developed/working - Measurements validate brassboard system
performance model and hardware
20Whats in the works?
- Improved 0-velocity, 0-range sampling apparatus
in progress for brassboard - Ruggedizing and field enclosure for brassboard
cross-validation - Field test alongside existing wind lidar system.
Perhaps the NOAA/ETL HRDL system. - Design (in progress this year) and construction
(next year?) of a ruggedized, field-widened
receiver suitable for aircraft testing,
environmental testing to achieve TRL 6 - Evaluating laser scaling issues and options.
- Extensive performance model development based on
the validated CALIPSO model, but including
detailed OAWL components, wind mission scenarios,
and spacecraft interactions.