Paper
23 September 1994 Principles of the formation of laser radar image being observed through a sea surface and water thickness
Alexandr G. Luchinin
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A great number of articles, special reference books and monographs are dedicated to the problem of underwater objects visibility. However many important problems remain unsolved. It concerns the underwater objects visibility through rough surface mainly. The present article is dedicated to the main aspects of this problem, exactly to the underwater objects observation with the aid of certain devices using artificial (laser) illumination. The notion of the image signal/noise ratio is introduced which takes into account both shot noises and signal fluctuations caused by a random air/water interface. Various methods of image formation for optic observation systems are considered. It is shown that the best results are obtained with the aid of the system, which has the maximum space and time averaging of fluctuations during the signal formation. Most important is the conclusion that the equivalence of two most popular methods of image formation (known in the theory visibility in turbid media) is violated, when observation is performed through a rough sea surface. In the considered case the best parameters has a system, which uses a pulsed laser beam of illumination with a wide aperture and a multi-unit receiver with time gating. The examples of calculation of the main characteristics of such systems are given.
© (1994) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Alexandr G. Luchinin "Principles of the formation of laser radar image being observed through a sea surface and water thickness", Proc. SPIE 2271, Industrial Applications of Laser Radar, (23 September 1994); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.188155
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KEYWORDS
Signal to noise ratio

Receivers

Image acquisition

Visibility

Scattering

Interfaces

Reflection

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