DocumentCode :
2886428
Title :
A fiber-optic-based 1550-nm laser radar altimeter with RF pulse compression
Author :
Allen, Christopher ; Gogineni, Sivaprasad
Author_Institution :
Kansas Univ., Lawrence, KS, USA
Volume :
3
fYear :
1999
fDate :
1999
Firstpage :
1740
Abstract :
The authors are developing a laser radar (lidar) altimeter that uses commercial off-the-shelf fiber-optic components and traditional RF and digital signal processing techniques to achieve fine-range accuracy despite a low transmit peak power. A 1550-nm operating wavelength was selected so that available erbium-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs) could be used to provide optical gain. The transmitted signal, an amplified, gated CW optical carrier intensity modulated with a linear-FM (chirp) RF signal, is launched into free-space via a fiber-optic collimator. An optical telescope serves as the receive aperture and couples the backscattered signal into a single-mode optical fiber prior to photodetection. The RF signal is then de-chirped and digitized for subsequent digital signal processing. Significant signal processing gains are achieved through coherent integration and pulse compression (FFT), resulting in fine-range accuracy. The authors have also performed preliminary design simulations for their pulse-compression laser radar for a spaceborne altimeter application and have compared its performance with that of the ICESAT (Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite) GLAS (Geoscience Laser Altimeter System) lidar. Their simulations show that a pulse-compression laser radar with an operating wavelength around 1310 nm, 1 W of peak power, 5 GHz of transmitter bandwidth and a PRF of 4 kHz could provide 200 elevation samples per second with an accuracy comparable to that of the GLAS lidar, which transmits 15 MW peak power with a 40-Hz PRF and obtains 40 elevation samples per second. The five-fold increase in elevation sample rate could then be used to provide elevation measurements across a swath, increasing the elevation mapping rate of the polar ice sheets. Notable advances demonstrated in this proof-of-concept system include the ability to trade signal bandwidth for transmitter power in a laser radar while achieving a constant range accuracy, and the joining of modern radar processing techniques with fiber-optic technology in a laser radar. This is the first stage of a program to develop a near-infrared laser altimeter for spaceborne polar region monitoring
Keywords :
geodesy; geophysical equipment; glaciology; hydrological equipment; oceanographic equipment; optical radar; remote sensing by laser beam; terrain mapping; topography (Earth); 1550 nm; CW optical carrier intensity modulated; GLAS; ICESAT; RF pulse compression; chirp; elevation; equipment; erbium-doped fiber amplifier; fiber-optic collimator; fiber-optic-based; fibre optics; fine-range accuracy; geodesy; geophysical measurement technique; glaciology; inear-FM RF signal; infrared laser; instrument; land surface topography; laser remote sensing; ocean; polar ice sheet; pulse-compression laser; sea level; spaceborne lidar; terrain mapping; Erbium-doped fiber lasers; Fiber lasers; Laser radar; Optical fibers; Optical pulses; Optical transmitters; Power lasers; Radar signal processing; Radio frequency; Spaceborne radar;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 1999. IGARSS '99 Proceedings. IEEE 1999 International
Conference_Location :
Hamburg
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5207-6
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.1999.772080
Filename :
772080
Link To Document :
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