1 February 1975 An Image Intensification and Video Recording System for Astronomical Observations
Marvin M. Hoffman, Mort Sanders, Donald H. Liebenberg
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
An airborne telescope utilizing a scanning interferometer and video recording system has been used by the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory for coronal-emission-line-profile measurements during the total solar eclipses of 1972 and 1973. A 250 mm diameter f/8.0 achromatic doublet refractor served as the objective lens, and a pressure scanned Fabry-Perot interferometer with narrow band transmission filters provided 0.005 nm spectral resolution of the selected emis-sion lines. A variable-gain channel-plate image intensifier, fiber-optically coupled to an Sb2 S3 vidicon tube, was adapted for use as a high sensitivity image detector. At maximum sensitivity this system was capable of recording a video image with signals as small as 5 x 10-9 J/m2 incident upon the in-tensifier photocathode. The vidicon tube was scanned at a rate of 60 fields per second in a 500-line, non-interlaced television format. The composite video signals were recorded on standard video tapes from which they were digitized for subsequent computer processing.
Marvin M. Hoffman, Mort Sanders, and Donald H. Liebenberg "An Image Intensification and Video Recording System for Astronomical Observations," Optical Engineering 14(1), 140176 (1 February 1975). https://doi.org/10.1117/12.7971770
Published: 1 February 1975
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CITATIONS
Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Video

Astronomy

Image intensifiers

Video processing

Fabry–Perot interferometry

Interferometers

Objectives

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