Semi-analytic simulation of optical wave propagation through turbulence

Abstract

Split-step wave-optical simulations are useful for studying optical propagation through random media like atmospheric turbulence. The standard method involves alternating steps of paraxial vacuum propagation and turbulent phase accumulation. We present a semi-analytic approach to evaluating the Fresnel diffraction integral with one phase screen between the source and observation planes and another screen in the observation plane. Specifically, we express the first phase screen’s transmittance as a Fourier series, which allows us to bring phase screen effects outside of the Fresnel diffraction integral, thereby reducing the numerical computations. This particular setup is useful for simulating astronomical imaging geometries and two-screen laboratory experiments that emulate real turbulence with phase wheels, spatial light modulators, etc. Further, this is a key building block in more general semi-analytic split-step simulations that have an arbitrary number of screens. Compared with the standard angular-spectrum approach using the fast Fourier transform, the semi-analytic method provides relaxed sampling constraints and an arbitrary computational grid. Also, when a limited number of observation-plane points is evaluated or when many time steps or random draws are used, the semi-analytic method can compute faster than the angular-spectrum method.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Nov 07, 2022
Source ID
10.1364/ao.465905

Entities

People

  • Greg Gbur
  • Jason A. Tellez
  • Jason D Schmidt

Organizations

  • Air Force Research Laboratory
  • University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Atmospheric Science / Meteorology, specifically Wind Wave Turbulence.
  • Image Processing and Computer Vision.
  • Phased Array Antenna Design.