Paper
13 August 2010 Effects of atmospheric water vapor on detection performance of a linear variable filter based instrument
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Linear variable filter design and fabrication for LWIR is now commercially available for use in the development of airborne reconnaissance or surveillance systems. The linear variable filter is attached directly to the cold shield of the focal plane array. The resulting compact spectrometer assemblies are completely contained in the Dewar system. This approach eliminates many of the wavelength calibration problems associated with current prism and grating systems and also facilitates the cost effective design and fabrication of aerial sensing systems for specific applications. An optimal 32 band linear-variablefilter- based system for detecting and discriminating a set of 11 chemicals representing a high probability of occurrence during a typical emergency response chemical incident was determined in a companion paper entitled "Linear Variable Filter Optimization for Emergency Response Chemical Detection and Discrimination". This paper addresses the effects of atmospheric water vapor on the performance of this optimal 32 band linear-variable-filter-based system. This paper also determines at what increased concentration levels above the optimal system design goal of 30 ppm-m can detection and discrimination of these 11 chemicals be achieved in realistic but imperfect atmospheric water vapor removal scenarios.
© (2010) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Sylvia S. Shen, David P. Miller, and Paul E. Lewis "Effects of atmospheric water vapor on detection performance of a linear variable filter based instrument", Proc. SPIE 7812, Imaging Spectrometry XV, 78120V (13 August 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.862002
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KEYWORDS
Absorption

Atmospheric modeling

Linear filtering

Atmospheric sensing

Chemical analysis

Scanners

Instrument modeling

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