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Optical turbulence profiling at the Table Mountain Facility with the Laser Communication Relay Demonstration GEO downlink

We report the first measurement of the atmospheric optical turbulence profile using the transmitted beam from a satellite laser communication terminal. A Ring Image Next Generation Scintillation Sensor (RINGSS) instrument for turbulence profiling, as described in Tokovinin (MNRAS, 502.1, 2021, 747-8...

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Published in:arXiv.org 2024-05
Main Authors: Birch, Marcus, Sabino Piazzolla, Hooser, Preston, Bennet, Francis, Travouillon, Tony, Buehlman, William
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Sabino Piazzolla
Hooser, Preston
Bennet, Francis
Travouillon, Tony
Buehlman, William
description We report the first measurement of the atmospheric optical turbulence profile using the transmitted beam from a satellite laser communication terminal. A Ring Image Next Generation Scintillation Sensor (RINGSS) instrument for turbulence profiling, as described in Tokovinin (MNRAS, 502.1, 2021, 747-808), was deployed at the NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Table Mountain Facility (TMF) in California. The optical turbulence profile was measured with the downlink optical beam from the Laser Communication Relay Demonstration (LCRD) Geostationary satellite. LCRD conducts links with the Optical Communication Telescope Laboratory ground station and the RINGSS instrument was co-located at TMF to conduct measurements. Turbulence profiles were measured at day and night and atmospheric coherence lengths were compared with other turbulence monitors such as a solar scintillometer and Polaris motion monitor. RINGSS sensitivity to boundary layer turbulence, a feature not provided by many profilers, is also shown to agree with a boundary layer scintillometer at TMF (R=0.85). Diurnal evolution of optical turbulence and measured profiles are presented. The correlation of RINGSS with other turbulence monitors (R=0.75-0.86) demonstrates the concept of free-space optical communications turbulence profiling, which could be adopted as a way to support optical ground stations in a future Geostationary feeder link network. These results also provide further evidence that RINGSS, a relatively new instrument concept, correlates well with other instruments in daytime and nighttime turbulence.
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subjects Boundary layers
Communication
Downlinking
Free-space optical communication
Ground stations
Lasers
Monitors
Mountains
Relay
Satellite imagery
Scintillation counters
Sensitivity
Synchronous satellites
Turbulence
title Optical turbulence profiling at the Table Mountain Facility with the Laser Communication Relay Demonstration GEO downlink
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