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http://dx.doi.org/10.3807/JOSK.2011.15.2.174

Imaging Performance Analysis of an EO/IR Dual Band Airborne Camera  

Lee, Jun-Ho (Department of Optical Engineering, Kongju National University)
Jung, Yong-Suk (Department of Optical Engineering, Kongju National University)
Ryoo, Seung-Yeol (Department of Optical Engineering, Kongju National University)
Kim, Young-Ju (Department of Optical Engineering, Kongju National University)
Park, Byong-Ug (Department of Mechanical Engineering, KAIST)
Kim, Hyun-Jung (Department of Mechanical Engineering, KAIST)
Youn, Sung-Kie (Department of Mechanical Engineering, KAIST)
Park, Kwang-Woo (Agency for Defense Development)
Lee, Haeng-Bok (Agency for Defense Development)
Publication Information
Journal of the Optical Society of Korea / v.15, no.2, 2011 , pp. 174-181 More about this Journal
Abstract
An airborne sensor is developed for remote sensing on an aerial vehicle (UV). The sensor is an optical payload for an eletro-optical/infrared (EO/IR) dual band camera that combines visible and IR imaging capabilities in a compact and lightweight package. It adopts a Ritchey-Chr$\tien telescope for the common front end optics with several relay optics that divide and deliver EO and IR bands to a charge-coupled-device (CCD) and an IR detector, respectively. The EO/IR camera for dual bands is mounted on a two-axis gimbal that provides stabilized imaging and precision pointing in both the along and cross-track directions. We first investigate the mechanical deformations, displacements and stress of the EO/IR camera through finite element analysis (FEA) for five cases: three gravitational effects and two thermal conditions. For investigating gravitational effects, one gravitational acceleration (1 g) is given along each of the +x, +y and +z directions. The two thermal conditions are the overall temperature change to $30^{\circ}C$ from $20^{\circ}C$ and the temperature gradient across the primary mirror pupil from $-5^{\circ}C$ to $+5^{\circ}C$. Optical performance, represented by the modulation transfer function (MTF), is then predicted by integrating the FEA results into optics design/analysis software. This analysis shows the IR channel can sustain imaging performance as good as designed, i.e., MTF 38% at 13 line-pairs-per-mm (lpm), with refocus capability. Similarly, the EO channel can keep the designed performance (MTF 73% at 27.3 lpm) except in the case of the overall temperature change, in which the EO channel experiences slight performance degradation (MTF 16% drop) for $20^{\circ}C$ overall temperate change.
Keywords
MTF; Airborne sensor; Optomechanics; EO; IR;
Citations & Related Records
Times Cited By KSCI : 1  (Citation Analysis)
Times Cited By Web Of Science : 1  (Related Records In Web of Science)
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