1 February 1996 Statistics of intermediate duration averages of atmospheric scintillation
Phillip D. Stroud
Author Affiliations +
An extensive set of measurements of the scintillation of a laser propagated over long horizontal paths through atmospheric turbulence, at altitudes spanning the tropopause was recently obtained. These measurements were made over sequences of parallel but displaced paths, like the rungs of a ladder. It is shown here that the intensity reductions caused by scintillation of two parallel paths separated by 35.6 m are partially correlated. Further, the correlations between paths with discrete experimental separations are used to construct the correlation functions for arbitrary path displacement. The variance in continuous moving averages of the relative intensity is then found in terms of the correlation functions, parameterized by the distance the propagation path is swept through the turbulence. An empirical formulation is developed for use in assessing the expected distribution of intensity reductions in various laser systems. This analysis recovers the statistics of atmospheric scintillation for the important regime in between the two extremes of a snapshot and a long time average.
Phillip D. Stroud "Statistics of intermediate duration averages of atmospheric scintillation," Optical Engineering 35(2), (1 February 1996). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.600927
Published: 1 February 1996
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Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Atmospheric propagation

Scintillation

Correlation function

Radio propagation

Atmospheric scintillation

Turbulence

Error analysis

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