Paper
31 October 1997 Performance trade-offs of infrared spectral imagers
Jack N. Cederquist, Craig R. Schwartz
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
IR spectral imagers are being considered for air to ground target detection applications. IR Fourier transform spectrometers have been used to make field measurements of targets and background. Analysis of these measurements has shown the presence of target to background color and the high spectral band to band correlation of many backgrounds. Detection of low contrast targets in high thermal clutter backgrounds can therefore be improved by using IR spectral sensors as opposed to broad or single narrow band IR sensor. However, the improvement requires a high quality IR spectral sensor. In particular, the sensor must be able to achieve low noise levels. This paper establishes, parametrically, the relationships between ground resolution distance, range, aperture size, spectral bandwidth, integration time, and sensor noise level. Likely required sensor noise levels for target detection are taken from previous estimates based on Fourier transform spectrometer data. Current performance of IR detector arrays is established from the open literature. Using these inputs and making reasonable assumptions as to the values of the other parameters, the trade space between detector array size, ground coverage rate, and sensor noise level is explored.
© (1997) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jack N. Cederquist and Craig R. Schwartz "Performance trade-offs of infrared spectral imagers", Proc. SPIE 3118, Imaging Spectrometry III, (31 October 1997); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.278936
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Infrared sensors

Target detection

Infrared radiation

Imaging systems

Signal to noise ratio

Infrared imaging

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