Wave-optics investigation of turbulence thermal blooming interaction: II. Using time-dependent simulations

被引:28
|
作者
Spencer, Mark F. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Air Force Res Lab, Directed Energy Directorate, Kirtland Air Force Base, NM 87117 USA
[2] Air Force Inst Technol, Dept Engn Phys, Wright Patterson Air For, OH 45433 USA
关键词
atmospheric propagation; atmospheric turbulence; thermal blooming; adaptive optics; beam control; ENERGY LASER-BEAMS; COMPENSATION INSTABILITY; PHASE-COMPENSATION; LINEARIZED THEORY; PROPAGATION; MODELS; LIGHT;
D O I
10.1117/1.OE.59.8.081805
中图分类号
O43 [光学];
学科分类号
070207 ; 0803 ;
摘要
Part II of this two-part paper uses wave-optics simulations to look at the Monte Carlo averages associated with turbulence and time-dependent thermal blooming (TDTB). The goal is to investigate turbulence thermal blooming interaction (TTBI). At wavelengths near 1 mu m, TTBI increases the amount of constructive and destructive interference (i.e., scintillation) that results from high-power laser beam propagation through distributed-volume atmospheric aberrations. As a result, we use the spherical-wave Rytov number, the number of wind-clearing periods, and the distortion number to gauge the strength of the simulated turbulence and TDTB. These parameters simply greatly given propagation paths with constant atmospheric conditions. In addition, we use the log-amplitude variance and the branch-point density to quantify the effects of TTBI. These metrics result from a point-source beacon being backpropagated from the target plane to the source plane through the simulated turbulence and TDTB. Overall, the results show that the log-amplitude variance and branch-point density increase significantly due to TTBI. This outcome poses a major problem for beam-control systems that perform phase compensation. (C) The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 26 条
  • [1] Wave-optics investigation of turbulence thermal blooming interaction: I. Using steady-state simulations
    Spencer, Mark F.
    OPTICAL ENGINEERING, 2020, 59 (08)
  • [2] Wave equations with time-dependent dissipation II. Effective dissipation
    Wirth, Jens
    JOURNAL OF DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS, 2007, 232 (01) : 74 - 103
  • [3] Investigation of turbulence thermal blooming interaction using the split-step beam propagation method
    Murphy, Connor E.
    Spencer, Mark F.
    UNCONVENTIONAL AND INDIRECT IMAGING, IMAGE RECONSTRUCTION, AND WAVEFRONT SENSING 2018, 2018, 10772
  • [4] The Bloch wave operator: generalizations and applications: II. The time-dependent case
    Jolicard, G
    Killingbeck, JP
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICS A-MATHEMATICAL AND GENERAL, 2003, 36 (40): : R411 - R473
  • [5] Wave-packet numerical investigation of thermal diffuse scattering: A time-dependent quantum approach to electron diffraction simulations
    Rudinsky, Samantha
    Sanz, Angel S.
    Gauvin, Raynald
    MICRON, 2019, 126
  • [6] General time-dependent configuration-interaction singles. II. Atomic case
    Carlstroem, Stefanos
    Bertolino, Mattias
    Dahlstrom, Jan Marcus
    Patchkovskii, Serguei
    PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2022, 106 (04)
  • [7] Comparing thermal wave function methods for multi-configuration time-dependent Hartree simulations
    Lorenz, U.
    Saalfrank, P.
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2014, 140 (04):
  • [8] Linear MHD Wave Propagation in Time-Dependent Flux Tube II. Finite Plasma Beta
    Williamson, A.
    Erdelyi, R.
    SOLAR PHYSICS, 2014, 289 (04) : 1193 - 1202
  • [9] Calibrating VLBI Polarization Data Using GPCAL. II. Time-dependent Calibration
    Park, Jongho
    Asada, Keiichi
    Byun, Do-Young
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2023, 958 (01):
  • [10] Extracting photoelectron spectra from the time-dependent wave function. II. Validation of two methods: Projection on plane waves and time-dependent surface flux
    Fetic, B.
    Tunja, M.
    Becker, W.
    Milosevic, D. B.
    PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2022, 105 (05)