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Efficacy of predictive wavefront control for compensating aero-optical aberrations
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2013
Year
AeroacousticsOptical MaterialsEngineeringOptic DesignOptical PropertiesAero-optical Wavefront AberrationsOptical SystemsDynamic AberrationsPhotonicsAero-optical AberrationsFreeform OpticOptical System AlignmentRadarAdaptive OpticFree Atmospheric TurbulenceAerospace EngineeringGeometrical OpticAerodynamicsGeometrical Aberration
Imaging and laser beam propagation from airborne platforms are degraded by dynamic aberrations due to air flow around the aircraft, aero-mechanical distortions and jitter, and free atmospheric turbulence. For certain applications, like dim-object imaging, free-space optical communications, and laser weapons, adaptive optics (AO) is necessary to compensate for the aberrations in real time. Aero-optical flow is a particularly interesting source of aberrations whose flowing structures can be exploited by adaptive and predictive AO controllers, thereby realizing significant performance gains. We analyze dynamic aero-optical wavefronts to determine the pointing angles at which predictive wavefront control is more effective than conventional, fixed-gain, linear-filter control. It was found that properties of the spatial decompositions and temporal statistics of the wavefronts are directly traceable to specific features in the air flow. Furthermore, the aero-optical wavefront aberrations at the side- and aft-looking angles were the most severe, but they also benefited the most from predictive AO.