Paper
24 April 2008 Mirage effects in the marine layer across Chesapeake Bay
Carlos O. Font, Cheree A. Armstrong, G. Charmaine Gilbreath, Luke Parchment, Michele Suite, H. Rayvon Burris
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Atmospheric effects deleteriously impact free space laser communications. Beam wander, distortion and beam bending can affect pointing and tracking in particular. Mirages are an example of these effects. In June 2006, a campaign was conducted across the Chesapeake Bay by the Naval Research Laboratory to quantify effects of mirages at the marine layer. We imaged a series of lights positioned strategically on a tower across the bay, at Tilghman Island, approximately ten miles away from NRL's Chesapeake Bay Detachment (NRL-CBD). Recorded images were subject to displacement and distortion as functions of temperature, humidity, dew point, and other meteorological parameters. Results from the experiment will be presented and phenomenology discussed.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Carlos O. Font, Cheree A. Armstrong, G. Charmaine Gilbreath, Luke Parchment, Michele Suite, and H. Rayvon Burris "Mirage effects in the marine layer across Chesapeake Bay", Proc. SPIE 6951, Atmospheric Propagation V, 695108 (24 April 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.800782
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KEYWORDS
Ocean optics

Humidity

Atmospheric optics

Data acquisition

Analytical research

Distortion

Receivers

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