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Optical design, laboratory test, and calibration of airborne long wave infrared imaging spectrometer.

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TLDR
A long wave infrared imaging spectrometer is discussed and evaluated in terms of its opto-mechanical design and analysis, alignment, testing, and calibration, which indicates the instrument's potential value in airborne sensing.
Abstract
We discuss and evaluate a long wave infrared imaging spectrometer in terms of its opto-mechanical design and analysis, alignment, testing, and calibration. The instrument is a practical airborne sensor achieving high spectral resolution and sensitive noise equivalent delta temperature. The instrument operates in the 8 to 12.5 μm spectral region with 28.85 nm spectral sampling, 1 mrad instantaneous field of view, and >40° cross track field. The instrument comprises three uniform sub-modules with identical design parameters and performances. The sub-module design is based on a refractive foreoptics feeding an all-reflective spectrometer. The optical form of the spectrometer is a double-pass reflective triplet with a flat grating, which has a fast f/2 and high optical throughput. Cryogenic optics of 100 K is implemented only for the spectrometer. Assembly and thermal deformation and focusing adjustment design are particularly considered for this low temperature. All the mirrors of the spectrometer are opto-mechanical-integrated designed and manufactured by single-point diamond turning technology. We consider the center sub-module as an example, and we present its laboratory testing results and calibration; the results indicate the instrument's potential value in airborne sensing.

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Optical design and evaluation of airborne prism-grating imaging spectrometer

TL;DR: The smart architecture of the prism-grating based spectrometer ensures high uniformity and image quality and should be suitable for use as a hyperspectral instrument that can be loaded onto airborne and unmanned aerial vehicles.
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The Scientific Information Model of Chang'e-4 Visible and Near-IR Imaging Spectrometer (VNIS) and In-Flight Verification.

TL;DR: Through analysis, it is found that the SNR ratio is in line with the predictions, and the data obtained by VNIS in orbit are consistent with the information model proposed in this paper.
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Characteristic Analysis of Compact Spectrometer Based on Off-Axis Meta-Lens

Yi Zhou, +2 more
- 26 Feb 2018 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed investigation of the influences of structural parameters of meta-lens-based spectrometers on the effective spectral range and the spectral resolution using both wave optics and geometrical optics methods is presented.
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Design and performance of curved prism-based mid-wave infrared hyperspectral imager

TL;DR: Curved prisms with a modified Offner structure is employed in this study as the spectrometer of the MWHSI and the image of flying plane is acquired and it satisfied the scientific goal.
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Optomechanical design and simulation of a cryogenic infrared spectrometer.

TL;DR: To continuously monitor, identify, and classify a wide range of areas all day and satisfy the hyperspectral remote sensing requirements in disaster reduction, environment, agriculture, forestry, marine, and resource areas, the authors designed a cryogenic infrared spectrometer working at the diffraction limit.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Design of pushbroom imaging spectrometers for optimum recovery of spectroscopic and spatial information

TL;DR: A modulation transfer function-based optimization method is described that generates optimal spectral and spatial uniformity of response from compact pushbroom imaging spectrometer designs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical design of a coastal ocean imaging spectrometer

TL;DR: An optical design for an airborne imaging spectrometer that addresses the unique constraints imposed by imaging the coastal ocean region is presented and it is shown how these requirements can be achieved with a two-mirror telescope and a compact Dyson Spectrometer utilizing a polarization-insensitive diffraction grating.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dyson spectrometers for high-performance infrared applications

TL;DR: The Dyson spectrometer form has the potential to deliver good imaging performance, high throughput, and low distortion in a compact configuration suitable for cryogenic infrared applications as discussed by the authors, but the three main requirements for a practical implementation are availability of the required concave diffraction grating, availability of Dyson lens material, and clearance for slit and focal plane packaging.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

First flights of a new airborne thermal infrared imaging spectrometer with high area coverage

TL;DR: A new airborne thermal infrared imaging spectrometer, "Mako", with 128 bands in the thermal infrared covering 7.8 to 13.4 microns, has recently completed its engineering flight trials as discussed by the authors.
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