Paper
4 September 2015 Digital holography wave-front sensing in the presence of strong atmospheric turbulence and thermal blooming
Mark F. Spencer, Ivan V. Dragulin, Daniel S. Cargill, Michael J. Steinbock
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Digital holography wave-front sensing in the off-axis image plane recording geometry shows distinct potential for directed-energy and remote-sensing applications. For instance, digital holographic detection provides access to the amplitude and wrapped phase associated with an optical field. From the wrapped phase, one can estimate the atmospheric aberrations present and perform adaptive-optics compensation and high-resolution imaging. This paper develops wave-optics simulations which explore the estimation accuracy of digital holography wave-front sensing in the presence of strong atmospheric turbulence and thermal blooming. Specifically, this paper models spherical-wave propagation through varying atmospheric conditions along a horizontal propagation path and formulates the field-estimated Strehl ratio as a function of the image-plane sampling, the coherence diameter, the log-amplitude variance, and the distortion number. Such results will allow one to assess the number of pixels needed in a detector array when using digital holographic detection in the presence of strong atmospheric turbulence and thermal blooming.
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Mark F. Spencer, Ivan V. Dragulin, Daniel S. Cargill, and Michael J. Steinbock "Digital holography wave-front sensing in the presence of strong atmospheric turbulence and thermal blooming", Proc. SPIE 9617, Unconventional Imaging and Wavefront Sensing 2015, 961705 (4 September 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2189943
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CITATIONS
Cited by 4 scholarly publications and 1 patent.
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KEYWORDS
Digital holography

Thermal blooming

Atmospheric turbulence

Atmospheric propagation

Staring arrays

Turbulence

Thermal sensing

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