Paper
18 December 1992 PEARLSS--a model for contamination effects: description and results
Laura A. Whitlock, John Larkin Jackson
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Abstract
A method has been developed which allows optical system designers to determine the effects at the focal plane from noise generated due to contamination in a sensor's near field-of-view and deposited on system mirrors. This method is embodied in the PEARLSS code, which allows an 'end to end' simulation of contamination generation, transport, deposition, and the resulting performance degradation for spaceborne optical systems. The code is constructed in such a way as to allow trade studies over parameters such as system materials, dimensions, operating temperatures and wavebands, pointing directions, orbital locations, and ground-processing cleanliness levels. PEARLSS outputs include a 2-D map of the scattered/emitted noise at the first mirror, the BRDF there due to particle deposition, and a map of the structured noise on the focal plane of the sensor system. All of these outputs are generated as functions of time. A simple test case is run through the code to demonstrate its various capabilities.
© (1992) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Laura A. Whitlock and John Larkin Jackson "PEARLSS--a model for contamination effects: description and results", Proc. SPIE 1754, Optical System Contamination: Effects, Measurement, Control III, (18 December 1992); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.140748
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KEYWORDS
Particles

Contamination

Sensors

Bidirectional reflectance transmission function

Mirrors

Curium

Mie scattering

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