Characterization of SIM on SIRCUS
Transcription
Characterization of SIM on SIRCUS
Characterization of SIM on SIRCUS Joseph P. Rice NIST Gaithersburg, MD Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Characterization Team • LASP – Jerry Harder, Erik Richard, and Nate Miller • NIST – Keith Lykke, Steve Brown, Robert Bousquet, and Joe O’Connell Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Outline • Description of the SIRCUS Facility • SIM Instrument Characterization • SIM ESR Responsivity Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 SIRCUS Facility Spectral Irradiance and Radiance responsivity Calibrations using Uniform Sources Tunable Laser Reference Radiometer Intensity Stabilizer Chopper or Shutter Radiometer under Test Linear Encoder Spectrum Analyser Wavemeter Exit Port Computer Integrating Sphere Optical fiber Speckleremoval System Monitor Detector (output to stabilizer) Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 SIRCUS Lasers & Powers -5 10 10000 Ti:Sapphire -6 10 Dye PPLN idler 100 2 Tripled Ti:Sapphire -7 10 KTP OPO CTA OPO Doubled Ti:Sapphire -8 10 10 irradiance at 1 m from sphere(W/cm ) output power (mW) 1000 PPLN signal Doubled Dye Quadrupled Ti:Sapphire -9 10 1 200 400 600 800 1000 3000 5000 Wavelength (nm) Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 SIM Optical Properties Overview IR Vis2 Vis1 ESR ‘ Fery Prism 35 mm Sun UV 400 mm Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop o R=435.3 mm Concave To ESR 5 Value 0.25-34 800-30 f/16 f/115 25 × 18 400 7 × 0.3 70 5 0.3-2.2 .3 Optical Characteristics Resolution (nm) Resolving Power Spectrometer f/# Solar f/# Prism Aperture (mm) Effective Focal Length (mm) Slit Sizes (mm) Scan Range in Focal Plane (mm) Optical Aberrations at Exit Slit (μm) Diffraction Correction (%) 34 Focal Plane From Entrance Slit Suprasil 300 R=445.4 mm Aluminized Convex 19 September 2006 Two possible methods for instrument function characterization 1. Fix prism, scan laser =>Direct Method 2. Fix laser, scan prism =>Indirect Method Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Wavelengths used for instrument function scans (vertical scale for red curve only (solar spectrum) Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Indirect Method λo = 458 nm Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop λo = 1600 nm 19 September 2006 Direct vs. Indirect Method (first cut) Fix prism @ CCD Pixel(λ =646) Scan laser Fix laser @ λ =646 nm Scan prism angle Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Summary of SIM Characterization • Good set of measurements to compare with theoretical predictions – from 458 nm to 1650 nm • Like to – – – – – Repeat IR measurements Extend spectral coverage to UV and IR Make spectral scans at other wavelengths Make good baseline scattering measurements Consider polarization? 200 700 1200 1700 2200 Wavelength [nm] Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 The ESR Problem: SIM disagrees with SOLSPEC Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 SIM ESR Responsivity: Setup Keep track of laser spot size and incident direction Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop Need to measure Incident Power Window Transmittance to get Power on the ESR 19 September 2006 SIM ESR Setup Pictures Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 SIM ESR Results: Vertical Mapping ESR Normalized Signal Bolometer ~ 1.5 mm x 12 mm => laser alignment critical Micrometer Position [mm] Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 SIM ESR Setup Beam Profiler Results 850 nm Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Beam Profiler Y linewidth, 1 % measured values 850.0 800.0 Beam Width [um] 750.0 700.0 650.0 600.0 550.0 500.0 450.0 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 Wavelength [nm] Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Incident Power • Measured with integrating sphere receiver with Si and InGaAs photodiodes • Calibrated directly against a cryogenic radiometer Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Window Transmittance Measurements • Measured in place, without moving chamber Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Preliminary ESR Efficiency Results Beam was recentered prior to measurements (center shifted ~200 um) Beam was not recentered after Ti:S measurements • • • Centering laser beam on bolometer critical (mapping); must be done with every laser change Brewster window improvements needed, transmittance should be measured prior to comparison w/ detector to save time with instrument Greater point density, extended coverage on both sides would be useful Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Summary and Future Work • Good characterization of the SIM slit scatter function • Promising measurements of the ESR responsivity • Worthwhile repeating the measurements – SIM: • Extend slit scatter function measurements into the UV & IR • Look more closely at baseline scatter level – ESR: • Extend the spectral coverage to UV & IR • Establish the uncertainty in the measurements • Timing for those measurements: – TBD, but currently planned for December-January Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Backup Slides Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 SIM Measurement Equation Ideally, Eλ ( λ s ) = PD (λs ) A Δλ (Wm −2 nm −1 ) Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 SIM “Brassboard” Layout Linear CCD Encoder Entrance Slit Exit Slits Prism Assembly Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 SIM Fery prism assembly Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 SIM focal plane assembly Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Entrance slit (view from back of focal plane) Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Direct determination of relative responsivity function (Fix prism at λo and scan laser wavelength) The spectral response of SIM set at λo to a laser source scanned over all wavelengths λ’ where there is a nonzero response (Δλ range) is S(Δλ , λo ) = ∫λ Eλ (λ ) ⋅ R E ( λo , λ ) ⋅ d λ Δ Or, S(Δλ , λo ) = κ ⋅ ∫ Eλ (λ ) ⋅ r(λo , λ ) ⋅ d λ Δλ where r(λo,λ) is the relative responsivity function and κ is a constant with respect to wavelength If the laser line is sufficiently narrow, r(λo,λ) can be assumed constant over Δλline , then ' S(Δλline , λo ) = κ ⋅ r(λo , λ ' ) ⋅ ∫ Eλ ( λ ) ⋅ d λ ' Δλline The output signal is proportional to the relative responsivity function for the wavelength setting of the prism, λo, and evaluated at the wavelength of the laser, λ’ By varying the laser wavelength, λ’, continuously over the range Δλ (with the laser irradiance constant), results in a determination of the relative responsivity function for prism wavelength setting λo. Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Indirect determination of relative responsivity function (Fix a narrow laser at λo and scan the prism) Again, S(Δλ , λo ) = κ ⋅ ∫ Eλ (λ ) ⋅ r(λo , λ ) ⋅ d λ Δλ However, since the laser wavelength is fixed, the detector responsivity is constant and must be explicitly accounted for in the determination of r(λo,λ) over all wavelengths r(λo , λ ) = z(λo − λ ) ⋅ r f (λ ) Slit-scattering function Responsivity factor If laser is fixed at λo and narrow S(Δλ , λo ) = κ ⋅ Eλ (λo ) ⋅ r f (λo ) ∫ z(λo − λ ) ⋅ d λ Δλ The major limitation of the indirect method is the validity of the λo-λ dependence in z(λo-λ) It has been assumed that the dispersion of the instrument is constant over the wavelength interval Δλ (as well as the optical aberrations, scattering and diffraction are the same) While generally okay for a high spectral resolution grating spectrometer, not the case for a low-res. prism spectrometer One would hope that the slit-scattering function z(λo-λ) would be stationary and symmetric, namely depend only on | λo-λ | However, the variable instrument dispersion introduces an additional dependence on the width of the instrument function. Additionally, in the wings, λo-λ dependence is no longer symmetric and shows a significant dependence on λ Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop 19 September 2006 Two laser peaks observed in IR Quick note on why two peaks… λs = 1459 nm Two wavelengths appear here because of the optical parametric process used to generate the longer wavelength colors λi = 1570 nm Ti:sapphire pump laser ( λp = 756 nm) is parametrically “down-converted” into a signal and idler wavelength the OPO crystal ωi ωp ωs in Solar Spectral Irradiance Intercomparison Workshop out 19 September 2006