Radiometric Calibration: Theory and Methods
eBook - ePub

Radiometric Calibration: Theory and Methods

  1. 214 pages
  2. English
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eBook - ePub

Radiometric Calibration: Theory and Methods

About this book

Radiometric Calibration: Theory and Methods contains an engineering development of the theories and methods of radiometric calibration. This book is organized into 18 chapters. Chapters I to V present an introduction to nomenclature, radiation geometry, and blackbody radiation that serves to simplify the discussion of the calibration theory. The rest of the chapters provide the theory of sensor calibration, reviewing numerous examples in which laboratory equipment and specific techniques are described. Algorithms are also covered for digital computer processing as appropriate for each functional aspect of sensor characterization. This publication is intended for engineers and applied physicists concerned with sensor calibration and the interpretation of sensor data.

Information

CHAPTER I

Introduction and Objectives

Publisher Summary

This chapter describes electro-optical sensors as a very powerful tool, which has a wide range of applications in various fieldssuch as military, industries, and scientific field. In the chapter, emphasis is given to the radiometer and the spectrometer. Spatial scanners, imaging systems, and polarimeters are also described. Radiometry or spectroscopy is concerned with the transfer of optical radiation between a target source and its associated background, through the intervening medium, to a receiver or detector of optical radiant energy. The chapter highlights the calibration of the spatial response, or field of view of a sensor, as a problem of spatial purity. It further explains the general objective of the calibration of electro-optical instrumentation, which is to obtain a functional relationship between the incident flux and the instrument output. The functional relationship is generally expressed as a mathematical equation that gives the magnitude of the radiant entity of interest as a function of the instrument output. Calibration of an instrument should make the measurement independent of the instrument and be conducted under conditions that reproduce the conditions under which the measurements are to be made. The calibration of the instrument requires a functional set of data concerning the spectral, spatial, temporal, and polarization characteristics of the instrument for which the linearity and background noise level in the instrument need to be investigated.

1-1 INTRODUCTION

The electrooptical sensor is a powerful tool with applications that vary from the characterization of the electronic states of atoms to the characterization of distant astronomical objects—from the smallest to the largest objects known to man. It has been used in military, industrial, and scientific applications too numerous to outline here [1, 2], and they will continue to play an important role in the modern world.
The radiometer (or photometer) and the spectrometer (including both sequential and multiplex types) are given prime emphasis here, but the general theory and practice apply also to spatial scanners, imaging systems, and polarimeters which are given less emphasis.
Radiometry (or spectroscopy) is concerned with the transfer of optical radiation between a target source and its associated background, through the intervening medium, to a receiver or detector of optical radiant energy. The problem is to determine the quantity and quality of energy or flux flowing in a beam of radiation. This is illustrated in Fig. 1-1 where the target source is shown imbedded in a background and an intervening atmosphere and illuminated by a source. The target, the background, and the atmosphere are represented as sources of reflected and emitted radiant energy. Some of the rays reflected and scattered from these sources reach the collecting aperture of the sensor.
image
Figure 1-1 General transfer of reflected and emitted energy or flux from a target and its background through an intervening media to an optical sensor which provides an output proportional to the quantity and the quality of the input radiation. (Adapted from F. E. Nicodemus, Radiometry. In ā€œOptical Instruments,ā€ Part 1 (R. Kingslake, ed.), Applied Optics and Optical Engineering, Vol. 4, p. 288. Academic Press, New York, 1967.)
The measurement problem can be considered as the problem of the characterization of the target using an electrooptical sensor as a remote detector of radiant flux. Characterization of a target means the determination of the target attributes such as the size, shape, or location of the target, its temperature, radiant properties, reaction rate, energy levels, etc.
Most of the target attributes cannot be measured directly [3] by remote sensing of radiant flux, but must be inferred from the instrument response to the flux incident upon the sensor aperture [3, p. VII-9]. For the limited case of noncoherent and noninterfering radiation, the target can be characterized in terms of four nearly independent domains: spatial (geometrical extent), temporal (time variations), spectral (distribution of energy of flux as a function of wavelength or optical frequency), and polarization.
It follows, therefore, that the calibration must also characterize the sensor response in these four domains. Large measurement errors can result from incomplete characterization of the out-of-band and/or the off-axis response of a sensor. For example, an antiaircraft missile guidance system may track the sun rather than the enemy aircraft; a rocket-borne radiometer may respond to thermal emissions of the earth rather than the hydroxyl emissions of the atmosphere in the earth limb; or a spectrometer designed to measure the Balmer lines in the ultraviolet may respond to the solar continuum. The degree to which this characterization of the optical sensor must be carried out depends on the attributes of the target and its background.
Target discrimination is a problem of the detection of a signal that is imbedded in noise. Discrimination can be accomplished by fully utilizing the characteristics of the target and the background.
The measurement problem that the sensor is designed to solve can also be considered as the problem of determining the quantity (the absolute or relative intensity) and the quality (within certain geometrical, spectral, and polarization limits) of the radiation scattered and emitted by the target source.
The calibration problem is to determine a functional relationship between the target source flux and the display unit output. Generally this is expressed as a responsivity in units of volts per unit flux, although the output might be current, count rate, deflection of a pen, density of an emulsion, etc.
The quality of the measurement is the most difficult aspect of calibration. As depicted in Fig. 1-1, the instrument aperture is bombarded with unwanted flux which arrives from outside the instrument field of view, such as the sun, earth, lights, etc. The sensor output for a spatially pure measurement is a function of the radiant flux originating from the target (within the sensor field of view) and is completely independent of any flux arriving at the instrument aperture from outside this region. Thus, in this book, the calibration of the spatial response, or field of view of a sensor, is considered to be a problem of spatial purity.
The instrument aperture is also bombarded with unwanted flux which is out-of-band, that is, outside of the spectral band of interest. The sensor output for a spectrally pure measurement is a function of the radiant flux originating from within the sensor spectral bandpass and is completely independent of any flux arriving at the instrument aperture from any spectral region outside the bandpass. Thus, in this book, the characterization of the spectral response of a sensor is considered as a problem of spectral purity.
The flux emanating from the target may be changing with time and may be polarized. The instrument may be moving or, for other reasons, may be time limited, and may be sensitive to the polarization of the incident flux. The time and polarization characteristics of the target may be considered as target attributes for discrimination against the background, may be related to physical processes in materials, or may prove to limit the detection of the target or of its characterization in the spatial or spectral domain.
Optically pure measurements are only approximated with practical instruments which are always nonideal. Consequently, the interpretation of field data is subject to some uncertainty and is often dependent on assumptions that must be made about the target.
The theory of radiometric calibration, as applied to sensors used to characterize remote target sources, is not well understood by many engineers and physicists engaged in measurement programs. However, the correct interpretation of field data is dependent on an understanding of the geometry of radiation and the theory and practical limitations of calibration. The ā€œidealā€ approach to calibration is often not possible because of the limitations of existing and/or available equipment. Consequently, many compromises in the ā€œidealā€ method must often be made. The nature of these compromises depends on the type of sensor and the resources (facilities, manpower, monies, etc.) that are available.

1-2 CALIBRATION OBJECTIVES

The general objective of the calibration of electrooptical instrumentation, for the measurement of remote radiant sources, is to obtain a functional relationship between the incident flux and the instrument output. The functional relationship is generally expressed as a mathematical equation (or a tabulation of values) which gives the magnitude of the radiant entity of interest Φ, as a function of the instrument output Ī“ as
image
(1-1)
All systems are not necessarily linear by design or by nature. Some detectors–transducers are inherently nonlinear. A...

Table of contents

  1. Cover image
  2. Title page
  3. Table of Contents
  4. Copyright
  5. Preface
  6. Chapter 1: Introduction and Objectives
  7. Chapter 2: Definitions
  8. Chapter 3: Radiometric Nomenclature
  9. Chapter 4: Blackbody Radiation
  10. Chapter 5: Geometrical Flux Transfer
  11. Chapter 6: Engineering Calibration
  12. Chapter 7: Standards and Calibration Uncertainty
  13. Chapter 8: Dark-Noise Analysis
  14. Chapter 9: Linearity Analysis
  15. Chapter 10: Spatial Purity
  16. Chapter 11: Field of View Calibration
  17. Chapter 12: Spectral Purity
  18. Chapter 13: Spectral Calibration
  19. Chapter 14: Temporal Response
  20. Chapter 15: Polarization Response
  21. Chapter 16: Practical Calibration of Cryogenic LWIR Systems
  22. Chapter 17: Calibration of a Radiometer—A Detailed Example
  23. Chapter 18: Calibration of an Interferometer–Spectrometer—A Detailed Example
  24. Appendix A: SI Base Units
  25. Appendix B: SI Prefixes
  26. Appendix C: Atomic Constants
  27. Index

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