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Analysis of a Dual Etalon Fabry Perot Cavity for application in a Geostationary Coastal Water Imager Viviana Vladutescu, Fred Moshary, Barry Gross, Samir Ahmed Optical Remote Sensing Lab, City College and Graduate Center of CUNY New York, New York 10031, USA City College of New York Motivation -Development of a compact Geostationary Hyperspectral Imager that can be easily tuned to different bands of interest for coastal water and urban observations -The main operating principle is the use of synchronized multiple cavity Fabry Perot etalons to provide single resonant spectral scanning capabilities with very low out of band light over the entire range from 400nm to 800nm coupled to appropriate optics to image onto a compact Charge Coupled Device (CCD) receiver. -This design avoids the need for various interference filters rotating into the beam. Multicavity Fabry Perot Interferometer Design A high resolution single wavelength Fabry Perot Interferometer with no filter to join the system was only proofed by now to be achievable by use of three etalons in series. The restrictions due to the free spectral range of one etalon with no additional filter can be overcome by the three parallel cavities in series with an absorbing medium between them. t t Ein T1T2T3Eint2 T1T2T3EinR1R22R3t6 T1T2T3EinR12R24R32t10 R1 R2 R3 Multicavity Fabry Perot Interferometer Design If reflections between etalons T1T2T3t 2 T (1 R1 R2t 2 )(1 R2 R3t 2 ) R1 R3T22t 4 t transmissi on of seperating region R j 1 T j With appropriate Optical Isolation Tsys The lengths are connected by the so called res “vernier” ratio 2L p p 1 2 Lq q 1 j j 2L p p If p=n, q=n+1, it is easy to prove that all neighboring resonances are eliminated until Therefore, maximum tuning range is limited. So T 2 Lq q 2 L2 p 2p Lp Lq 2 L2 q 2q p q max 2min res 2 Optical train A L2 60mm S H=100km R M C θ/2=2.6775° α=0.02916 26.6 mm Q y=300mm N B 11 ” α=0.02916 O 49.3mm O’ L’= L=32000km B’ 2800mm D spotsize α=0.02916 456.1mm P h’=8.75mm A’ L1 60mm 150mm •Schmidt Cassegrain telescope (11’ diameter) •Double etalon Fabry Perot (60cm diameter ~ 2.5um spacing) t=.85 • 2048x2048 CCD with a pixel size of 13umx13um. •Pixel resolution ~ 100 meters Time Exposure of the CCD Detector SNR 100 -3 4 x 10 3.8 Required exposure time across the spectrum for an SNR=100 assuming an optically thick aerosol layer covering a typical deep ocean signal 3.6 Time(s) 3.4 3.2 3 2.8 2.6 2.4 2.2 4 4.5 5 5.5 6 6.5 Wavelength(m) 7 7.5 8 -7 x 10 Etalon Transmissions Transmission of each etalon tuned to T 600nm a) b) Wavelength(m) Transmission of the a) three uncoupled cavities and b) three and two detuned vernier cavities Detected and retrieved water leaving radiance 0.3 0.05 Retreived water leaving radiance including out of band compensation 0.045 0.25 0.04 Ignoring out of bands effects Reflectance 0.2 0.035 0.03 0.15 0.025 0.1 0.02 TOA reflectance Water leaving radiance Ignoring out of band effects 0.05 0.015 0.01 0 0.005 True water leaving radiance -0.05 4 5 6 7 8 0 4 -7 x 10 5 6 7 8 -7 Wavelength x 10 Conclusions The system presented here describes the transmission of a dual cavity planemirror Fabry–Perot interferometer. We illustrate in principle the design for a VIS/NIR Fabry Perot Imaging Spectrometer and develop a proceedure to calculate the characteristics of the needed components. We have also shown that if we use synchronously scanned multiple etalon cavities, we may significantly increase the FSR without decreasing the bandwidth of the resonance allowing single mode operation over the 400nm-800nm band with only a single fixed interference filter. The S/N between the main resonance and the sideband resonance is somewhat impacted by the multiple reflections of the cavities but we show that a moderate decoupling of the etalons is sufficient to reduce the sidebands. Furthermore, we have performed a SNR analysis and show that sufficient SNR may be achieved for limited integrations times on the order of 4 ms. With the inclusion of the scanning times and CCD dump times, an overall scan of 200 hyperspectral channels can be performed over 10 seconds In addition, we show that the appearance of off resonant side bands in the spectrum need to be considered. If these bands are ignored, the overall water leaving radiance is extremely overestimated but by a suitable inversion taking into account the spectral details of the out of band signals, accurate water leaving radiances may be obtained even in the presence of noise. Acknowledgements: This work is partially supported by a NASA-COSI grant #NCC-1-03009 References [1]. Gary G.A., Balasubramaniam K.S., and Sigwarth M., Science Group, “Multiple Etalon Systems for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope”, Project Documentation, Technical Note #0005, http://atst.nso.edu, Tucson, AZ 85719, 07 August 2002 [2]. Larar A M., Hays P B., and Drayson S. R , “Global tropospheric and total ozone monitoring with a doubleetalon Fabry–Perot interferometer.I. 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