DocumentCode
1069133
Title
CO2 laser preamplifier capabilities for low-level 10.6-µm direct-detection receivers
Author
Lotspeich, James F.
Author_Institution
Hughes Research Laboratories, Malibu, CA
Volume
13
Issue
6
fYear
1977
fDate
6/1/1977 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
371
Lastpage
379
Abstract
We examine the potential of CO2 laser preamplifiers for sensitivity enhancement in low-level, direct-detection 10.6-μm receivers. For the condition in which a gain-dependent competition exists between the background noise and amplifier spontaneous emission noise (assuming negligible thermal noise), the analysis predicts an optimum useful SNR enhancement of only 6 dB for a blackbody background field of 300 K and 4.1 dB for a background of 260 K, when the amplifier gain bandwidth per
-line is 100 MHz and the infrared (IR) filter bandwidth is 0.10 μm. Based on preselected choice of gain and bandwidth, a two-stage, water-cooled, flowing-gas amplifier of optimized design was constructed. A maximum gain of 3.12 dB was attained for
with a He : CO2 : N2 mixture of 5.0 : 1.0 : 0.6 at a coolant temperature of 285 K and a slow gas refresh rate of 0.2 volumes/s. Using a fast-flow system with 12-volume/s refresh rate, we measured an amplifier gain of 3.9 dB, close to the design estimate of 4.1 dB. With a calibrated HgCdTe detector,
cold shield, and narrow-band (0.25 μm) cold filter, a spontaneous emission flux density of
photons/ cm2. s was measured at the 3.12-dB gain level, in close agreement with the theoretical estimate. Excess noise resulting from amplifier discharge was undetectable above the basic detector noise.
-line is 100 MHz and the infrared (IR) filter bandwidth is 0.10 μm. Based on preselected choice of gain and bandwidth, a two-stage, water-cooled, flowing-gas amplifier of optimized design was constructed. A maximum gain of 3.12 dB was attained for
with a He : CO
cold shield, and narrow-band (0.25 μm) cold filter, a spontaneous emission flux density of
photons/ cm2. s was measured at the 3.12-dB gain level, in close agreement with the theoretical estimate. Excess noise resulting from amplifier discharge was undetectable above the basic detector noise.Keywords
Background noise; Bandwidth; Design optimization; Detectors; Filters; Gain measurement; Laser noise; Preamplifiers; Signal to noise ratio; Spontaneous emission;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9197
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JQE.1977.1069347
Filename
1069347
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