Affiliation:
1. Naval Surface Warfare Center
2. University of Notre Dame
3. Air Force Research Laboratory
Abstract
The work presented here experimentally measures the tilt imposed on a
laser beam by the atmosphere from Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensor
measurements collected in-flight. Tip/tilt is imposed on the laser
beam by propagating through optical turbulent structures larger than
or of the order of the size of the beam diameter. This tip/tilt causes
a dynamic, net deflection of the beam in the far field, referred to as
jitter, which poses a serious problem for tracking in directed energy
applications. The practical measurement of turbulence-induced tip/tilt
at altitude is challenging since mechanical contamination in the form
of vibrations also manifests as tip/tilt. In this paper, a procedure
referred to as the stitching method is used to quantify the
turbulence-induced component of tilt without the influence of
mechanical corruption. It is found that the measured tilt aligns with
what analytic solutions predict and that the turbulent environment
through which the beam propagates has Kolmogorov-like
characteristics.
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Engineering (miscellaneous),Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Cited by
9 articles.
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