Paper
18 April 2008 Simulated impact of aero-optical effects on a 200 km air-to-air lasercomm link
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Abstract
We present a simulation of a 200 km air-to-air link in the presence of aero-optical boundary layers. The boundary layer is shown to be the dominant phase aberrator. The random tilt content in the boundary layer is minimal, which reduces the performance gain of a fast steering mirror. Higher order adaptive optics are shown to provide a significant performance improvement provided it can run at high enough bandwidths.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Kevin R. Bock and Gary J. Baker "Simulated impact of aero-optical effects on a 200 km air-to-air lasercomm link", Proc. SPIE 6951, Atmospheric Propagation V, 695106 (18 April 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.785011
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KEYWORDS
Receivers

Wavefronts

Adaptive optics

Mirrors

Scintillation

Deformable mirrors

Atmospheric modeling

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