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Messages - Matt Wilkinson

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31
Hi Toshi

These are really useful and i guess every station has something to think about. The SGF, Herstmonceux has been addressing its residual vs RMS plot by looking at our data reduction procedure.

It would be great if all stations could post here on the forum what they are doing to address the trends seen in these charts.

The pdf http://geo.science.hit-u.ac.jp/slr/bias/2017sp/SortDelay7.pdf has multiple entries for Potsdam, Greenbelt, Wettzell and others, is this correct?

Matt

32
Lasers / Start Diodes - What is best?
« on: May 04, 2017, 09:46:01 AM »
Hi all

What start diode setups are stations currently using in their lasers to detect laser fires and trigger a timer start? I'll go and find the details of the Herstmonceux diode and post it here, but i know we use a rather cheap diode in to a threshold discriminator.  Is there anything better out there anyone could recommend? Are people satisfied with their start diodes?

When we moved to kHz SLR and lower energy pulses (from 20mJ to 1mJ), the threshold for a start had to be dropped considerably.  And so alignment is critical.  If it is not optimised we can get large RMS values in our calibrations.

Matt

33
Hi all

From about the beginning of 2017, the team at the SGF noticed some increased instability in our terrestrial range calibration values at the level of 2-3 mm.  It was particularly clear on the first calibration of the day being a low value and so we learnt to take at least two calibrations before starting an observing duty.

2 weeks ago we also saw an increase in the RMS of the calibrations and some periodic behaviour in the calibration range values.  We consequently took the kHz laser offline and began using our older 10Hz laser, which had very stable calibration values and RMS.

After some investigation and discussion with High-Q, the team found that the flow rate of the cooling water was much lower than it should have been.  The water used is a reservoir of distilled water, but after 10 years of use something had built up to block the waterways.

Temperatures in the laser bed were not being kept at a stabilised constant, causing energy fluctuations and range errors from the start diode. The temperature would change when the laser began firing after being off for a period (20+ minutes). It would stabilise after approximately 10 minutes, during which time calibration range differences were seen.

Running the flow backwards and using a descaler (Durgol was recommended) brought the flowrate up to specification levels.  Setting the best operating temperature removed the signals in the range values and now the calibration RMS and repeatability are now within acceptable levels.

Needless to say, we will be checking the flowrate more often from now on.

Matt

34
Telescopes / Re: CCTV/ICCD/EMCCD cameras for tracking
« on: February 22, 2017, 03:23:26 PM »
Hi Kalvis

I've been testing one of these cameras https://www.thorlabs.de/newgrouppage9.cfm?objectgroup_id=4024, which are rebranded uEye cameras from IDS https://en.ids-imaging.com/home.html (more to choose from at IDS site!).

It is very adaptable and affordable with an extensive API with example software. If you don't need a top of the range camera, these could be worth a look, depending on the job you have in mind.

Matt

35
In-Sky Safety / Re: On telescope camera for plane spotting
« on: January 31, 2017, 12:20:20 PM »
Hi Kalvis

That's quite a narrow FOV.  We are wondering here @Hx what would be the best approach, either to use a wider image to spot approaching planes and take action when necessary or to have a narrower field to immediately shutoff when any plane like object appears in the frame (perhaps using a comparison to an earlier frame).

We've not tested our camera at night yet.

Matt

36
Happy New Year everyone

So far today at Herstmonceux, we had a mixed experience from SLR cpf predictions after the leap second. There were time bias issues with the Jason satellites using the CNES cpf predictions.  Also Galileo205 was off by 1 second using the ESA predictions, I've not yet seen if this holds for all Galileo. HY2A and Kompsat5 were also off on the MCC predictions. Most other satellites are well predicted. Successfully tracking Lageos with JAXA cpfs.

CPF predictions are compared here http://sgf.rgo.ac.uk/qualityc/cpf_qc_resids.html each day and it is clear that there are conflicting predictions

37
Data and Software Questions / What are the Software Languages used for SLR?
« on: December 07, 2016, 12:55:00 PM »
The forum platform can run polls among its members.  Here's the first one - and it's an easy question!

38
Station Operational Questions / Re: Beam Divergence Measurement
« on: October 27, 2016, 03:06:17 PM »
An alternative way to look at energy densities at satellite heights would be to make measurements at the satellite.  The Jason2 mission has recorded energies of SLR pulses since its launch in 2008 as part of the OCA/CNES time transfer by laser link (T2L2) payload.

The attached plot shows the average energies for individual stations recorded at Jason-2 for the year 2015.  The energies were normalised to the Jason2 height in the zenith (1336 km) and corrected for atmospheric attenuation

My thanks to P. Exertier and OCS and CNES colleagues for providing this data.

39
Station Operational Questions / Re: Beam Divergence Measurement
« on: October 27, 2016, 02:56:24 PM »
I presented the results from the SLR beam divergence measurement campaign, carried out over the summer of 2016, at the NESC meeting during the 20th ILRS Laser Workshop held in Potsdam, Germany. Most stations were able to use the beam divergence procedure and get good results. These are presented in the first attachment.

Some stations however we not able to carry out the procedure for a number of reasons, including:
  • Faulty energy sensor/meter
  • High energy detection threshold
  • Limited telescope pointing/tracking accuracy
Data was provided by some stations using alternative methods (shown with white hash lines), including:
  • Satellite scanning
  • Optical system ray tracing
  • Measurements in the focal plane
Mount Stromlo, Australia carried out many measurements, see attachment #2.  There is some variability in the results and it seems that lower values were recorded for the GNSS satellites. The chart suggests that taking multiple measurements on different satellites on different nights will give a better average reading than a single measurement. Matera, Italy also took many measurements, see attachment #3. The results show the two different beam divergence settings used.

The procedure includes a secondary part where a operator can change the beam divergence setting and making a quick comparative measurement.  This was carried out at Herstmonceux, UK for a number of satellites at different times by 2 observers. The trend fit can now be used to relate the arbitrary beam expander setting value to a real divergence value.

Attachment #4 is the averaged values for each station. Included is a green line indicating the stated beam divergences in the ILRS Site Logs.
Attachment #5 shows the energy density from each station at a height of 1336km, calculated using these beam divergence values and the laser pulse energies from the ILRS Site Logs. The y-axis has been limited, the Wettzell result is 0.28 microJ/cm2 and the Grasse result is 0.65 microJ/cm2.

The beam divergence procedure is giving good consistent results for many stations with generally close agreement with the ILRS SIte Log entries.

Please add your comments below.

40
Ideas / Re: Making satellites visible during daylight ranging
« on: September 21, 2016, 09:17:53 AM »
Hi Georg

Do you have any more details on how to do this? What equipment do you use?  And can you post an image?

Matt

41
Lasers / Laser wavelength spectral width
« on: September 14, 2016, 12:49:45 PM »
What experience has anyone had with laser beam spectral line width?

Is it correct that there is some broadening of the laser wavelength spectrum with shorter beam pulse lengths?

Has anyone measured this effect or know what their laser spectral pulse is?

At Herstmonceux we use a narrow band filter for daylight ranging, but we are concerned that we cannot select the narrowest filter possible because we must consider the spectral width of our kHz laser.

42
In-Sky Safety / On telescope camera for plane spotting
« on: September 02, 2016, 12:13:36 PM »
Who uses an optical camera system to detect aircraft around the laser pointing direction? We are interested in perhaps trialling such a system at Herstmonceux.  Are the aircraft always identifiable in the images? What method do you use for detection? Can it work at night?

Cheers

Matt

43
Station Operational Questions / Beam Divergence Measurement
« on: August 23, 2016, 04:08:44 PM »
Hi

It is now essential that ILRS stations are able to estimate, or measure, the angular divergence of laser pulses emitted during satellite laser ranging. With this divergence value, along with the laser pulse energy, it is possible to calculate the energy density at satellite heights.  This is of high interest to satellite mission operators, particularly those with on-board equipment that could be sensitive to incident laser light.

A procedure to measure beam divergence was drafted by the NESC and is available to download http://ilrs.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/2016/BeamDiv_procedure_201606.pdf

Stations are using this procedure and other methods to determine beam divergence with some success, particularly after some practice.

It would be helpful for forum members share their experience, advice and issues here so that all stations can get a reliable divergence measurement.

Matt

44
Station Operational Questions / Re: Normal Points software
« on: July 22, 2016, 10:11:48 AM »
Hi Manuel

We're going to send you some of our FORTRAN (not C) that will enable you to adjust the orbit to get flat residuals from which you can generate NPs using the link Evan sent.

Hopefully you can use this to develop what you need

Matt

45
Data and Software Questions / Re: decmera program
« on: July 22, 2016, 09:31:42 AM »
Hi Luis

Jose at the SGF, Herstmonceux has been in touch with your colleague Manuel on this subject and we will supply you with some of our FORTRAN code to help you to adjust the orbit to get flat residuals from which you can then make Normal Points using the method described here http://ilrs.gsfc.nasa.gov/data_and_products/data/npt/npt_algorithm.html.

I hope this will work for you

Matt

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