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INTRODUCTIONIn the frame of the EarthCARE programme, Airbus Defence and Space SAS is currently developing one of the mission core instruments: the UV atmospheric lidar ATLID. The EarthCARE mission, sixth Earth Explorer Mission of the ESA Living Planet Programme, is developed in cooperation with JAXA. It addresses the interaction and impact of clouds and aerosols on the Earth’s radiative budget. For the first time, a suite of four complementary instruments will make simultaneous observations of the same cloud/aerosol scene. ATLID shall determine vertical profiles of cloud and aerosol physical parameters (altitude, optical depth, backscatter ratio and depolarisation ratio) in synergy with the cloud profiling radar (CPR) provided by JAXA, the multi spectral imager (MSI) and the broad-band radiometer (BBR). Operating in the UV range at 355 nm, ATLID provides atmospheric echoes with a vertical resolution up to 100 m from ground to an altitude of 40 km. Thanks to a high spectral resolution filtering, the lidar is able to separate the relative contribution of aerosol (Mie) and molecular (Rayleigh) scattering, which gives access to aerosol optical depth. Co-polarised and cross-polarised components of the Mie scattering contribution are also separated and measured on dedicated channels. The combination of a powerful laser transmitter delivering short pulses at 51 Hz and low noise detection chains based on memory CCD provides capability to measure even faint backscatter from sub-visible cirrus. Radiometric stability is ensured by a continuous active re-alignment system maintaining the accurate co-alignment of emission and reception paths, and by a highly stable injection of the single-mode laser transmitter. The paper is presenting an updated status of the development of the instrument and subsystem design. While the instrument is completing its detailed design, most of the sub-systems are under manufacturing of their Flight Model (FM) and qualification activities. The paper provides manufacturing status and first equipment test results, in particular for what concerns the laser transmitter development. An overview of the instrument verification and test campaigns is also presented. I.THE EARTHCARE MISSIONCurrently, clouds and aerosols are the biggest uncertainty in our understanding of the atmospheric conditions that drive the climate system. An improved understanding and better modelling of the relationship of clouds, aerosols and radiation is therefore amongst the highest priorities in climate research and weather prediction. For this purpose, global data on cloud and aerosol occurrence, structure and physical properties together with collocated measurements of solar and thermal radiation are required. By acquiring vertical profiles of clouds and aerosols, as well as the radiances at the top of the atmosphere, EarthCARE (Earth Cloud Aerosol and Radiation Explorer) aims to address these issues. The mission goals are to retrieve vertical profiles of clouds and aerosols, and the characteristics of their radiative and micro-physical properties, to determine flux gradients within the atmosphere and fluxes at the Earth’s surface, to measure directly the fluxes at the top of the atmosphere. It will allow clarifying the processes involved in aerosol-cloud and cloud-precipitation-convection interactions in order to include them correctly and reliably in climate and numerical weather prediction models. The EarthCARE mission is the sixth Earth Explorer Mission of the European Space Agency Living Planet Programme. The mission is the largest and most complex Earth Explorer mission to date and is being developed as a joint venture between ESA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, JAXA. The EarthCARE satellite carries a suite of four instruments: an ATmospheric LIDar (ATLID), a Cloud Profiling Radar (CPR), a Multi-Spectral Imager (MSI) and a Broad-Band Radiometer (BBR). The instruments operate individually and in synergy. All instruments are directed towards the satellite ground track with the exception of the Multi-Spectral Imager which provides an imaged swath distributed about the satellite ground track. Stringent pointing requirements ensure co-registration of the three nadir pointing instruments and accurate knowledge of their position in the swath of the imager. II.ATLID MEASUREMENT PRINCIPLE AND OVERVIEWA.Instrument measurement conceptATLID measures atmospheric profiles in a direction close to the nadir from a sun-synchronous orbit at 393 km altitude, with a vertical resolution of about 100 m from ground to an altitude of 20 km and 500m from 20km to 40km altitude. The instrument emits short laser pulses with a high repetition rate (51 Hz) along the horizontal track of the satellite, so that several shots can be locally averaged to improve the signal to noise ratio. The measurement principle which was retained for ATLID uses the fact that interaction of light with molecules (Rayleigh scattering) or aerosols (Mie scattering) leads to different spectral widths. Whereas the Brownian motion of molecules induces a wide broadening of the incident light spectrum, the single scattering with an aerosol does not affect the spectrum shape of the incident light which remains narrow. As a consequence, a simple means of separating the backscattering contributions consists in filtering the backscattered spectrum with a high spectral resolution filter centred on central wavelength: most of Mie backscatter flux is transmitted by the filter, while Rayleigh backscatter signal is reflected to another channel. The instrument is thus able to separate the relative contribution of aerosol (Mie) and molecular (Rayleigh) scattering, which gives access to aerosol optical depth. Co-polarised and cross-polarised components of the Mie scattering contribution are also separated and measured on dedicated channels. The operating wavelength in the Ultra-Violet spectral range was selected as the molecular scattering is high enough to measure accurate extinction profiles and aerosols/thin clouds thickness. The 355nm wavelength can be obtained using Nd:YAG laser technology and frequency tripling conversion; it also ensures a receiver high response with CCD technology and provides large margin with respect to eye safety. B.Instrument overviewATLID is designed as a self-standing instrument reducing the mechanical coupling of instrument/platform interfaces and allowing better flexibility in the satellite integration sequence. The instrument is based on a bistatic architecture consisting of two independent main sections, the emitter chain and the receiver chain. This architecture was preferred to monostatic architecture (emission and reception paths share the same telescope) as it allows efficient mitigation of Laser Induced Contamination risk, by avoiding cross-contamination of emission and reception chain, by permitting the full pressurization of the emission path, and by limiting the number of optical surfaces exposed to vacuum. The instrument functions are shared between a ‘high stability’ assembly (consisting of the telescope equipped with the focal plane optics, and the optical emission chain, presented in Fig. 2), and a housing structure assembly supporting the electronic units and their radiator, the detection chain and the harness. Stability performance of the ‘high stability assembly’ is favoured by the assembly of laser and optics on a single CFRP sandwich base-plate, from which all units out of the stability chain are excluded. This sandwich allows optimizing both high stiffness for supporting both 37kg laser units, and low hygro-thermal expansion for stability. The Emitter chain includes:
The Receiver chain includes:
III.DEVELOPMENT STATUSA.Transmitter and Emitter chain developmentWhile the laser transmitter is largely inheriting from the Aladin instrument development for the AEOLUS mission, a significant evolution of the laser design lies in the fact that ATLID power laser head is sealed and pressurized. This improvement ensures more stable operating conditions to the sensitive components of the laser, and isolates the laser internal space from surrounding contaminants over the ground and operational lifetime. Pressure also improves tolerance to laser induced contamination, which is the degradation of an optical surface resulting from the interaction of molecular contamination with a high laser illumination level. The mechanical design overview presented on Fig. 3 is based on a double-sided aluminium bench interfaced to ATLID support baseplate via 3 iso-static mounts. The “H” architecture of the bench ensures that bench distortion due to pressurisation is minimised. The Laser Head cavity is closed by its two covers sealed with Viton gasket. Selex ES, as prime of the Laser Transmitter, has been developing an extensive set of hardware models as full scale breadboard used for validation and correlation with developed numerical models, a Power Laser Head Laser Induced Contamination test model, consisting in a pressurized enclosure with representative optics and contaminants bay. A significant achievement in 2013 was the development and the testing of a Power Laser Head Structural and Thermal Model. The model used for qualification of the housing sealing was submitted to vibrations and thermal cycles at qualification level. The sealing of the pressurized housing was thus demonstrated to meet the 3 years lifetime in orbit. The integration of a Power Laser Head Qualification Model has progressed with the assembly of the Master Oscillator section and dedicated environmental tests were performed to characterise the performance in advance of the full Laser Head environmental tests. The campaign was successfully completed early 2014, with in particular the confirmation of the Master Oscillator opto-mechanical stability over the specified mechanical and thermal environment. The performance of the Master Oscillator was also confirmed to be compatible with the Power Laser Head requirements. Recently, a dedicated test campaign to characterise the laser performance tolerance to micro-vibration perturbations has been conducted successfully. The Laser Amplifier completed successfully its qualification testing at Quantel Laser and is to be integrated in the Laser Head Qualification Model. This will be followed with the UV section alignment before submitting the PLH to full environmental qualification campaign. In parallel, the development of the Transmitter Electronics is supported by two engineering models, one delivered to Airbus Defence and Space SAS, instrument prime in Toulouse, for early functional verification at instrument level, before manufacturing the 2 flight models. In parallel, an extended programme and systematic Laser Induced Damage measurements for each optics batch (infrared and UV) integrated in the Power Laser Head is carried out as part of the optics qualification programme. These are performed in specialised laboratories at DLR and ESTEC. The Beam Steering Assembly development by CEDRAT and SODERN is based on a Qualification Model followed by the manufacturing and testing of the 2 flights models to be integrated in the Power Laser Heads. The Steering Mechanism passed successfully mechanical and thermal vacuum environmental testing and will be further coupled with the Electronics to demonstrate its fine performance (sub-microradian accuracy). A dedicated Optical GSE has been developed by SODERN to allow measurements in the microradian range accuracy. The development of the Emission Beam Expander by SODERN relies also on new technologies, as the unit is sealed and pressurised with dry air and shall expand the laser beam to more than 100mm diameter: this requires large brazed windows, large lenses mounts development with stringent requirements in WFE, high transmission and qualification for laser irradiation. The development of the EBEX has been supported by a number of qualifications activities (large lens mount, brazed windows) successfully concluded and the FM units parts are now under manufacturing. B.Receiver developmentThe receiver development is now well advanced, as all Flight Models (FM) manufacturing or assembly has started. As shown on Fig. 5, the silicon carbide FM telescope structure is assembled, and the two mirrors are ready to be aligned. The focal plane optics have different development approaches, depending on their criticality and complexity. The Entrance Filtering Optics (polarisation control and narrow bandpass interference filter) and the Blocking Filter (spatial filtering) shown on Fig.6 are developed by Bertin Technologies in a proto-flight approach; the flight models are fully assembled, and are ending their qualification test sequence before delivery. Based also on a proto-flight approach, the two Fabry-Perot etalons flight models manufacturing is on-going at SESO, with challenging tolerances (only a few nanometers parallelism are tolerated over a 40 mm distance), and will be delivered by RUAG Space in 2015. The fibre couplers developed by Bertin Technologies have undergone successful qualification on qualification models, and FMs assembly is about to start. The Co-Alignment Sensor, developed by CRISA and aiming at measuring the retro-reflected laser spot with better than 1/10 pixel accuracy, is currently ending its mechanical and thermal qualification sequence before start of FM manufacturing. C.Mechanical and thermal units developmentsDue to the large number of units, the strong dissipation induced by the laser transmitter, and the interface on carbon fibre panel, ATLID mechanical and thermal functions are particularly complex to design. The high stiffness and high stability required for the Stable Structure Assembly (developed by APCO) supporting the telescope and the laser heads impose thick double-stages CFRP sandwich panel and strong titanium brackets. The large dissipation (above 600 W) of the units together with the inhomogeneity of materials (aluminium for electronics, carbon-fibre for interface panel) requires for the housing structure assembly a complex assembly of aluminium sandwiches, aluminium structure, titanium blades and brackets, and carbon-fibre panel designed by Airbus Defence and Space. The critical design reviews of the structures and cooling systems are now passed, as well as the qualification on breadboards of critical technologies (high load inserts, embedded titanium mounts) and the manufacturing has started, in a proto-flight approach. IV.INSTRUMENT VERIFICATION AND TEST PROGRAMMEThe instrument development programme is based on a proto-flight approach: after assembly and characterization of the FM optical assembly, the stable assembly and the equipped housing structure assembly are coupled before starting the full qualification of PFM model. Several activities are however conducted to secure this PFM approach. The detection chain, as a key contributor to the radiometric performance, has been validated through several steps, starting with detection breadboard aiming at validating the specific accumulation CCD designed for ATLID with representative proximity electronics. Then, the final proximity electronics design, developed by CRISA, has been coupled to the MCCD, cooled down to -30°C, and operated for the first time with Airbus Defence and Space’s developed oversampling filters, to demonstrate less than 2 e- rms total noise in darkness. In parallel, the Engineering Electrical Model (EEM) is built with all electronics Engineering Models, allowing complete electrical, EMC, and functional verification. This on-going step is of prime importance in the validation of electrical design and cross-compatibility, but is also a major input to ATLID software correction and final version specification. The opto-mechanical design is mainly validated at unit level, but the Detector and Fibre Assembly, for which less than 5 microns stability is required, has been successfully qualified in mechanical and thermal environment in advance of FM manufacturing. The mini loop heat pipes, which is a technical innovation for laser cooling (8 loops in parallel are used to cool down each PLH), have also been successfully tested in a breadboard configuration to validate ability of start-up, heat sharing, and inhibition. Finally, a major validation step has been reached recently with the successful testing of Laser Induced Contamination effect on representative optical coating, exposed in vacuum to representative contamination (simulated with material samples) and UV laser fluence. More than 400 millions of shots have been performed during 7 weeks, and transmission loss, lower than 10% has been found acceptable for the mission. V.CONCLUSIONATLID will fly on the EarthCARE satellite with launch scheduled in early 2018. This Earth Explorer Core mission of ESA will allow better understanding and modelling of radiative effect of clouds and aerosols and their impact on the climate. ATLID, one of the core instruments of the mission, is currently being developed by Airbus Defence and Space, on the basis of a mature design which nevertheless features innovations such as ultra-low noise detection chain, optical fibre links, mini loop heat pipes. The large extent of the heritage allows proposing a secured development approach to meet the programmatic constraints of the EarthCARE programme. REFERENCES: REPORTS FOR MISSION SELECTION ESA SP-1279(1) – EarthCARE – Earth Clouds, Aerosols and Radiation Explorer, http://esamultimedia.esa.int/docs/SP_1279_1_EarthCARE.pdf Google Scholar
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