Dr. Mark C. Abrams
Director
SPIE Involvement:
Author | Instructor
Publications (9)

Proceedings Article | 12 January 2005 Paper
Proceedings Volume 5653, (2005) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.580323
KEYWORDS: LIDAR, Imaging systems, Photon counting, Laser sources, Image resolution, Near infrared, Remote sensing, Laser applications, Spatial resolution, Pulsed laser operation

Proceedings Article | 23 December 2002 Paper
Proceedings Volume 4792, (2002) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.451381
KEYWORDS: Imaging systems, Image restoration, Reconstruction algorithms, Sensors, Image resolution, Radiometry, Modulation transfer functions, Data modeling, Satellite imaging, Satellites

Proceedings Article | 25 October 2002 Paper
William Sharp, Michael Dobbs, Jeremiah Zimmermann, Mark Abrams
Proceedings Volume 4772, (2002) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.451835
KEYWORDS: Sensors, Signal to noise ratio, Atmospheric modeling, Carbon dioxide, Absorption spectroscopy, Absorption, Fiber lasers, Laser spectroscopy, Receivers, Data modeling

Proceedings Article | 24 September 2002 Paper
Proceedings Volume 4814, (2002) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.451881
KEYWORDS: Imaging systems, Temperature metrology, Mendelevium, Clouds, Spatial resolution, Infrared imaging, Computer simulations, Data modeling, Image processing, Error analysis

Proceedings Article | 31 January 2002 Paper
Thomas Russell, William Sharp, Berrien Moore, Peter Rayner, Inez Fung, Donald Wuebbles, Edward Zimmer, Todd Summers, Katherine Chambers, Michael Dobbs, Chris Lietzke, Jeremiah Zimmermann, Mark Abrams
Proceedings Volume 4539, (2002) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.454430
KEYWORDS: Carbon dioxide, Satellites, Carbon, Atmospheric modeling, Data modeling, Clouds, Absorption, Laser spectroscopy, Spectroscopy, Atmospheric monitoring

Showing 5 of 9 publications
Conference Committee Involvement (1)
Lidar Technologies, Techniques, and Measurements for Atmospheric Remote Sensing
19 September 2005 | Bruges, Belgium
Course Instructor
SC410: Fourier Transform Spectrometry: Theory, Methods, and New Applications
The Fourier transform spectrometer (FTS) has been recognized as a critical technology for remote sensing and is central to many NASA/ESA missions. The FTS enables a large family of visible and infrared applications from laboratory studies to atmospheric sounding to planetary exploration. In essence, the FTS instrument is a realization in glass and metal of Fourier's theorem. Consequently, designing the instrument requires a firm grounding in both optics and digital signal processing--so that one can 'see' through the Fourier transform and relate the measured signal (the interferogram) to the desired spectrum and understand the distortions of the spectrum introduced by the transfer function of the instrument. The course will be divided into two parts: theoretical and practical considerations and a survey of implementations and applications.
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