Paper
6 December 2016 Verification for robustness to laser-induced damage for the Aladin instrument on the ADM-Aeolus satellite
Denny Wernham, Alessandra Ciapponi, Wolfgang Riede, Paul Allenspacher, Fabio Era, Alessandro D'Ottavi, Dominique Thibault
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Abstract
The Aladin instrument will fly on the European Space Agency’s ADM Aeolus satellite. The instrument is a Doppler wind LIDAR, primarily designed to measure global wind profiles to improve the accuracy of numerical weather prediction models. At the heart of the instrument is a frequency stabilized 355nm laser which will emit approximately 100mJ of energy in the form of 20ns pulses with a fluence around 1Jcm-2. The pulse repetition frequency is 50Hz meaning that Aladin will eventually have to accumulate 5Gshots over its 3 years planned lifetime in orbit. Due to anomalies that have occurred on previous spaceborne lasers, as well as a number of failures that we have observed in previous tests, an extensive development and verification campaign was undertaken in order to ensure that the Aladin instrument is robust enough to survive the mission. In this paper, we shall report the logic and the results of this verification campaign.
© (2016) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Denny Wernham, Alessandra Ciapponi, Wolfgang Riede, Paul Allenspacher, Fabio Era, Alessandro D'Ottavi, and Dominique Thibault "Verification for robustness to laser-induced damage for the Aladin instrument on the ADM-Aeolus satellite", Proc. SPIE 10014, Laser-Induced Damage in Optical Materials 2016, 1001408 (6 December 2016); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2245545
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KEYWORDS
Laser induced damage

Oxygen

Ultraviolet radiation

Aerospace engineering

Coating

Contamination

Satellites

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