1 October 1990 Segmented mirrors for atmospheric compensation
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Abstract
An optical wavefront propagating through the atmosphere will be perturbed by local variations in the refractive index ofthe atmospheric gases. When accumulated over long optical path distances they will impart a spatial and temporally random distortion to the wavefront. These distortions have a characteristic spatial coherence length r0 and an atmospheric decorrelation time ?0. In directed energy applications, atmospheric distortions can reduce the peak target energy densities of larger diameter laser beams by orders of magnitude. The problem is not solved through the use of larger apertures; once the aperture size increases beyond one or two r0, the far-field spot remains constant in size. Hence, for large aperture systems, the overall performance is set by the spatial coherence of the atmosphere and not by the system's exit pupil.
William G. Hulburd and David G. Sandler "Segmented mirrors for atmospheric compensation," Optical Engineering 29(10), (1 October 1990). https://doi.org/10.1117/12.55713
Published: 1 October 1990
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Cited by 25 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Segmented mirrors

Actuators

Wavefronts

Atmospheric optics

Mirrors

Adaptive optics

Atmospheric propagation

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