Proceedings Article | 10 October 2023
Sarath Gunapala, David Ting, Alexander Soibel, William Johnson, Olga Kalashnikova, Michael Garay, Ashley Davies, Sir Rafol, Sam Keo, Brian Pepper, Cory Hill, Cristopher David, Ashok Sood, John Zeller, Sachidananda Babu, Parminder Ghuman
KEYWORDS: Fire, Infrared radiation, Infrared search and track, High dynamic range imaging, Mid-IR, Staring arrays, Remote sensing, Infrared imaging, Imaging systems, Digital electronics
Remote sensing and characterization of high temperature targets on the Earth’s surface is required for many cross-disciplinary science investigations and applications including fire and volcano impacts on ecology, the carbon cycle, and atmospheric composition. For decades this research has been hindered by insufficient spatial resolution and/or detector saturation of satellite sensors operating at short and mid-infrared wavelengths (1-5 μm) where the spectral radiance from high temperature (>800 K) surfaces is most significant.
To address this critical need, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory is developing a compact modular high dynamic range (HDR) multispectral imager concept, with the flexibility to operate in the short, mid- or long-wavelength infrared spectral bands. The goal of this project is to demonstrate this novel technology through the maturation of a mid-wavelength infrared (MWIR) imager, the Compact Fire Infrared Radiance Spectral Tracker (c-FIRST), which leverages digital focal plane array (DFPA) developed under the Advanced Component Technology (ACT) Program of the NASA Earth Science Technology Office. The DFPA is comprised of a state-of-the-art high operating temperature barrier infrared detector (HOT-BIRD) and a digital readout integrated circuit (D-ROIC), which features an in-pixel digital counter to prevent current saturation, and thereby provides very high dynamic range (>100 dB). The DFPA will thus enable unsaturated, high-resolution imaging and quantitative retrievals of targets with a large variation in temperatures, ranging from 300 K (background) to >1600 K (hot flaming fires). With the resolution to resolve 50 m-scale thermal features on the Earth’s surface from a nominal orbital altitude of 400 km, the full temperature and area distribution of fires and active volcanic eruptions and the cool background are captured in a single observation, increasing science content per returned byte. The use of a non-saturating detector is novel, overcomes previous problems where high radiance values saturate detectors (which diminishes the science content and usefulness of the data), and demonstrates a breakthrough capability in remote sensing – one with broad applicability in both terrestrial and planetary settings. By incorporating this technology, c-FIRST is suitable for quantifying emissions from fires and volcanic eruptions of different temperatures and intensities, which is critical for establishing their impact on ecosystems, carbon fluxes, and air-quality at local scales and climate at global scales. In this presentation we will discuss the properties of the c-FIRST focal plane array. The research was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. © 2023. All rights reserved.