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Micro Hyperspectral Systems For UAVs

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Presentation on theme: "Micro Hyperspectral Systems For UAVs"— Presentation transcript:

1 Micro Hyperspectral Systems For UAVs
If a picture is worth 1000 words, a hyperspectral image is worth almost 1000 pictures RSPSoc and NERC Cluster UAV Workshop University of Durham, 7-8 June 2011 Dr John P Ferguson Photonics & Analytical Marketing Ltd

2 TOPICS TO BE COVERED Headwall Photonics Explanation of Hyperspectral Imaging Some applications The Headwall Micro Hyperspec Imaging from UAVs

3 HEADWALL PHOTONICS INC
American Holographic, Inc. Agilent Technologies acquisition 2003 – Headwall Photonics launched Currently 40 employees Factory in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, USA Producers of imaging spectrometers, OEM spectral engines, original holographic gratings

4 Applications of Headwall Technology
Hyperspec V10 – Marine Ocean Buoy Project (MOBY) Hyperspec VS30 – NRL airborne requirement for remote sensing and ocean color monitoring Hyperspec VS15 – USAF airborne mine detection in littoral zones Hyperspec VS15 – USN Predator-based project for Project Warhorse Hyperspec VS15 – NRL Ocean PHILLS sensor Hyperspec VS15 – AFRL LWIR sensor for polarimetric sensing for battlefield surveillance Hyperspec VS25 – Selected by NASA for International Space Station deployment Hyperspec VS25 – First UAV deployment Hyperspec VS – Custom UV/MCP unit deployed for AFRL missile plume tracking Hyperspec VS50 – Airborne SWIR sensor Micro-Hyperspec VNIR and NIR – Introduced in 2006 for UAV and SUGV deployment Hyperspec-VNIR – NASA deployment for AVIRIS project augmentation Hyperspec-VNIR, Hyperspec-NIR, Hyperspec-SWIR – integrated instruments for commercial applications Micro-Hyperspec – UAV remote sensing

5 Applications of Headwall Hyperspectral Systems
Space Piloted UAV Ground-based Handheld Small Satellite Multiple Platforms Base protection Reconnaissance

6 WHAT IS HYPERSPECTRAL IMAGING?
Collection of high resolution spectral detail over a large spatial and broad wavelength region from within each pixels instantaneous field of view Also known as imaging spectroscopy, chemical sensing Chemical/spectral imaging within spatial dimension Many definitions Common requirement = > ~ 100 spectral bands No definition has explained spatial requirements

7 Example – Airborne remote sensing
Image Source: BAE Systems

8 THE VISIBLE LIGHT SPECTRUM

9 What information can the spectrum tell us?

10 The type of building material used

11 The type of vegetation

12 The rock strata

13 The type of ground

14 How does it work?

15 AN OUTLINE OF HYPERSPECTRAL IMAGING

16 A TYPICAL SCENE

17 THE CAMERA’S VIEW

18 THE VIEW THROUGH A SLIT - PIXELS IN ROW 7

19 PIXELS IN ROW 11

20 PIXELS IN ROW 17

21 THE HYPERSPECTRAL DATA

22 CLOSER TO REALITY

23 A HYPERSPECTRAL DATA CUBE

24 Some technical stuff

25 Hyperspectral Design Options
Prism-Grating-Prism Transmission-based grating system Aberration-Corrected Concentric All-reflective system Three reflective surfaces Headwall’s imager design optimized for … Imaging performance – Aberration-corrected Minimal stray light High signal-to-noise High dynamic range High spectral/spatial resolution Efficiency across total spectral range Deployment in harsh environments Ruggedized & durable Small, compact size Minimal thermal expansion

26 THE HEADWALL PATENTED SPECTROGRAPH DESIGN
Attributes - Integrated spectrometer solution - High spectral/spatial resolution - Very tall image slit - Very low image distortion - Low stray light, high signal-to-noise Small package size Flight hardened no moving parts Entrance Slit Original holographic high efficiency convex grating Detector Plane

27 Hyperspec© Concentric Design
Advantages - selection of concentric design … Extremely compact nature Image quality (spectral/spatial resolution) Superior aberration-correction characteristics Lower F number All reflective design Additionally, Headwall sensors offers additional benefits … Balanced spectral performance across range Lower stray light Tall image slits - Spectral & spatial performance off-axis Performance in lower VIS / blue region

28 THE SALES PITCH Key Imaging Spectrograph Risks:
Fore-optics  Imaging Spectrograph  Detection Electronics Key Imaging Spectrograph Risks: Keystone (spatial distortion) Smile (spectral distortion) Vignette Scatter (transmissive materials, poor surface qualities, replicated optics) Stray Light (overfilled optics, secondary diffracted orders, inadequate baffeling) Chromatic Aberrations and Astigmatism Low Optical Dynamic Range

29 CAMERA CONSIDERATIONS
Fore-optics  Imaging Spectrograph  Detection Electronics Key Detection Electronics Risks: Base chip dynamic range - pixel full well capacity / (dark current + read noise) A/D bit depth Pixel resolution (spatial and spectral) Spectral band sensitivity Readout speed Readout method Second order detection

30 Traditional Hyperspectral Imaging Deployments
Remote Sensing Military/Defense Ocean Monitoring Surveillance Search & Rescue Geological Mapping Target Identification & Tracking Spectral Tagging Environmental Analysis Photos: Courtesy of NRL, Space Computer, BAE, General Atomics

31 Micro-Hyperspec™ for UAVs
Design goals: Very small size, form factor Less than 1 lb pounds Excellent imaging and S/N performance Aberration-corrected optics Low-power CCD/CMOS sensor Modular for variety of input & detector options Spectral Ranges VNIR nm NIR nm

32 Micro-Hyperspec in Agriculture

33

34 Micro-Hyperspec for Airborne Turrets & Gimbals
Fully integrated – sensor, GPS/INS, processor board Designed for integration into UAV turrets & gimbals Single attachment point

35 Micro-Hyperspec – Small Tier UAVs Mounting Options
Tier 2 UAV Hyperspectral mounting options Micro-Hyperspec within Payload Bay Payload bay or forward turret

36 Micro-Hyperspec – Payload Bay Mounting Tier II UAV

37 Fiber-Optic-Downwelling Irradiance Sensor (FODIS)
In-flight calibration of Hyperspec© sensor Fully reflective FODIS module allows frame-by-frame real-time tracking of the solar Irradiance allowing

38 High Efficiency Sensors
Three spectral ranges – Ext VNIR ( nm), NIR ( nm), & SWIR (900– 2500nm) Extremely high optical efficiency Lightweight for airborne missions Athermal design for measurement accuracy and stability Tall image slit for wide field of view, swath path efficiency Custom designed fore-optics High Efficiency sensors offer peak efficiency greater than 90%, minimum 70%

39 Thank you for listening


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