The Improvement in Turbulence-Degraded Beam Quality Obtained with a Tilt-Correcting Aperture

Abstract

In this report, the degradation in the focal-plane irradiance distribution due to atmospheric turbulence, and the potential improvement realizable by employing a wavefront tilt-correcting aperture is calculated. It has been shown that, when the aperture diameter is of the order of the outer scale of turbulence, virtually no improvement is realized relative to the uncompensated case. For the case when the long-term coherence length is small compared with the diameter, there is considerable improvement over the long-term case; however, the focal-point intensity can still be several decibels down from its vacuum value, implying no better than several times diffraction-limited performance. When the coherence length is not much smaller than the diameter, close to diffraction-limited performance can be expected. Comparisons have also been made of the reduction of on-axis intensity with no compensation, tilt- correction, and a full phase-compensating aperture It is shown that the effective coherence length of the compensated aperture due to the residual amplitude fluctuations is greater than the long-term coherence length by a factor of the square--root of the Fresnel number of the aperture; for high Fresnel number systems, this larger coherence length results in considerable increases in on-axis intensity.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Nov 01, 1975
Accession Number
ADA023199

Entities

People

  • Arthur R. Hines
  • Richard F. Lutomirski
  • W. Lee Woodie

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Air Platforms

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Amplitude
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Atmospheric Motion
  • Compensation
  • Degradation
  • Diameters
  • Diffraction
  • Distortion
  • Far Field
  • Focal Planes
  • Frequency
  • Numbers
  • Optical Lattices
  • Phase Distortion
  • Spherical Waves
  • Turbulence
  • Wavefronts

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Atmospheric Science / Meteorology, specifically Wind Wave Turbulence.
  • Electromagnetic Wave Scattering and Antenna Radiation Engineering
  • Wave Propagation and Nonlinear Chaotic Dynamics.