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NASA

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Title: NASA


1
NASAs Laser Risk Reduction Program- Accomplishm
ents and UpdateUpendra N. Singh
William S. Heaps Chief Technologist, SEC,
NASA LaRC NASA/GSFC 757-864-1570u.n.s
ingh_at_larc.nasa.gov
2
Outline
  • Background
  • LRRP Strategy and Synergies
  • Objectives and deliverables
  • Recent Accomplishments
  • Future Plans
  • Conclusions

3
Laser Risk Reduction Program Origins
  • Earth Science Independent Laser Review Board
    empanelled in 2000 in response to multiple laser
    instrument mission issues
  • Panel reviewed past and present NASA ESE laser
    remote sensing missions
  • CALIPSO, ICESat, LITE, SPARCLE (NMP/EO-2), VCL
  • Panel report included 11 recommendations, the
    most key being
  • NASA should identify and intensively develop
    critical fundamental technologies applicable to
    multiple missions and investigate formation of
    interagency coalition to assure supply of diode
    pumped lasers
  • NASA should create a Laser Research Super
    Center managed by NASA HQ and drawing from laser
    research teams at the field centers
  • An interagency technology alliance should be
    formed for the development of space-based active
    optical sensors and associated critical enabling
    technologies (especially transmitter-class
    lasers)
  • NASA Administrator mandated formulation of an
    Agency-level lidar technology development plan
  • Laser Risk Reduction Program (LRRP) was
    established, based on recommendations from joint
    LaRC/GSFC strategy team
  • Program initiated in FY02
  • Co-funded by ESTO and Code R Enabling Concepts
    and Technologies (ECT) program

4
INLSST Charter
  • Develop lidar technology for NASAs future
    measurements
  • Assemble in-house NASA team with end-to-end lidar
    capability (theory to hardware to validation)
  • Collaborate with industry, academia, and
    government
  • Validate technology to reduce risk of space-based
    lidar missions before the proposal process
  • Transfer technology to industry

5
Overview
Laser based instruments are applicable to a wide
range of Earth Science, Aerospace Technology,
Space Science, and Space Flight Enterprise
needs Risk in lidar missions can be significantly
reduced by progress in a few key
technologies Modest NASA investment towards
proposed strategy will have significant impact on
future space-based active remote sensing
missions Strategic alliance with other government
organizations, industry, and academia for
leveraging and accelerating advancement of key
technologies
6
Integrated NASA Lidar Systems Strategy Team Report
  • Presentation to
  • Daniel S. Goldin, NASA Administrator
  • By
  • Ghassem R. Asrar Samuel L. Venneri
  • Associate Administrator Associate
    Administrator
  • Earth Science Enterprise Aerospace Technology
    Enterprise
  • Jeremiah F. Creedon Alphonso V. Diaz
  • Director, NASA LaRC Director, NASA GSFC
  • Upendra N. Singh and William S. Heaps
  • Co-Leaders
  • Integrated NASA Lidar Systems Strategy Team
    (INLSST)
  • June 18, 2001

Draft Copy
Preliminary Draft For Agency Use Only
7
Lidar is a Multi-Enterprise Need
Clouds/Aerosols Tropospheric Winds Ozone Carbon
Dioxide Biomass Burning Water Vapor Surface
Mapping Laser Altimetry Oceanography
NASA Enterprises Needs
Earth Science
Aerospace Technology
Laser Technology
Space Science
Space Flight
Mars Lander Guidance/Control
Mars Atmospheric Sensing
8
Earth Sciences Application Foci
  • Key Priority Measurements for Earth Science
    Enterprise
  • Cloud/Aerosols and Radiative Forcing
  • Tropospheric Winds/River Flow
  • Tropospheric Ozone
  • Carbon Cycle (CO2, Biomass)
  • Surface Mapping
  • Oceanography

9
Lidar Techniques and Measurements
  • Differential Absorption Lidar (DIAL)
  • Ozone
  • Carbon Dioxide
  • Doppler Lidar
  • Wind Fields
  • River Flow
  • Backscatter Lidar
  • Cloud
  • Aerosol
  • Altimetry Lidar
  • Ice Sheet Mass Balance
  • Vegetation Canopy
  • Land Topography

10
Earth Sciences Application Foci
2 Lasers, 4 Techniques, 6 Priority Measurements
Pulsed Laser Development
2.05 micron
DIAL CO2
Backscatter Lidar Aerosols/Clouds
Coherent Ocean/River Surface Currents
2 MICRON
2.05 micron
Atmosphere Lower Upper

Doppler Lidar Wind
Key Technologies in Common Laser Diodes Laser
Induced Damage Frequency Control Electrical
Efficiency Heat Removal Ruggedness
Lifetime Contamination Tolerance
Coherent Winds
Coherent
Direct
Noncoherent Winds
0.355 micron
X3
1 MICRON
X2
Altimetry
Surface Mapping, Oceanography
1.06 micron
DIAL Ozone
X2
0.30-0.32 micron
Backscatter Lidar Aerosols/Clouds
0.532 micron
OPO
11
Laser Transmitter Testbeds
Laser Induced Damage Now 15 J/cm2 for 5
nsec Goal 60 J/cm2 for 5 nsec
Contamination Tolerance Now 50, A/10 Goal
Better Tolerance
Ruggedness Now 1 min _at_ 10G Goal 1 min _at_ 15 G
Lifetime Now 850? M shots Goal 2 G shots
2 µ Test Bed
Knowledge
1 µ Test Bed
Heat Removal Now 110 Watts Goal 300 Watts
Frequency Control Now lt .25 pm Goal lt .005 pm
Electrical Efficiency Now 3-4 Goal 6
11
12
Recommendations
  • Establishing Space-hardened Laser Transmitter
    Test Beds (1µm laser at GSFC 2µm at LaRC)
  • Development and Qualifications of Space-based
    Laser Diode Arrays ( 808nm diodes at GSFC
    792nm at LaRC)
  • Advancing Wavelength Conversion Technology
    for Space-based Lidars ( Low Energy/HRT at
    GSFC High Energy/LRT at LaRC)

13
NASA Laser Risk Reduction Program
  • Deliverables
  • Space-hardened 1- and 2-micron Laser Transmitters
    (Efficient, Conductively-cooled)
  • Space-hardened Conductively Cooled Laser Diode
    Arrays
  • Non-linear Optical Parametric and Harmonic
    Generation for Ozone, Chemical and Biological
    Species, and Water Vapor Detection

Funding (M) FY 03 FY 04 FY 05 FY 06 FY 07 FY 08
OAT 5 5 5 5 5 5
OES 4 4 4 4 4 4
Total 9 9 9 9 9 9
14
Laser Risk Reduction Management Model
NASA HQ
15
LRRP Description
  • Pro-actively targets deficiencies in laser
    technology for focused development and risk
    mitigation
  • Technology readiness overestimated in past due to
    extrapolation from prior heritage
  • Flight lasers are still at the build-to-order
    RD stage
  • Primary focus is on high-power (i.e.,
    transmitter-class) lasers for space-based remote
    sensing applications
  • High-performance NdYAG systems (1 µm)
  • Emerging holmium- and thulium-doped lasant
    materials (2 µm)
  • Nonlinear generation schemes based on 1- and 2- µ
    m pump sources
  • Harmonic generation
  • Optical parametric amplification/oscillation
    (OPA/OPO)
  • Small investments in ancillary enhancing and
    enabling technologies which offer potential to
    reduce demand for laser power (detectors,
    innovative receiver approaches)

16
LRRP Application Driven Elements
  • 2-micron laser transmitter
  • Demonstrate technologies leading to a
    conductively cooled, diode-pumped 2-micron laser
    suitable for space-based lidar application
  • Address major laser development issues High
    energy, high efficiency, laser-induced optical
    and thermal damage, system thermal management
  • High-power diode laser pump arrays
  • Develop, scale, and qualify long-lived,
    space-compatible laser diode arrays with current
    vendors
  • Evaluate currently available laser diode arrays
    for performance, life and configuration required
    for future space-based laser missions
  • Establish Characterization and Lifetime Test
    Facility to address laser diode issues
  • Limited reliability and lifetime
  • Lack of statistical and analytical bases for
    performance and lifetime prediction
  • Conceive advanced laser diode array architectures
    with improved efficiency and thermal
    characteristics
  • Nonlinear optics research for space-based ozone
    DIAL
  • Spectrally narrow, tunable, robust UV laser
    architectures
  • Develop long-lived, efficient, space-compatible,
    nonlinear optical materials/techniques
  • Receiver technologies
  • Develop integrated heterodyne receiver to
    demonstrate 3-dB improvement of coherent lidar
    system efficiency with 80 reduction of required
    local oscillator power
  • Develop improved quantum efficiency
    photon-counting detectors at 2 micron
  • Laser physics and advanced materials research
  • Develop line tunable diode-pumped Nd laser system
    for pumping nonlinear UV generation schemes
  • Develop narrowband, long pulse, low average power
    pump laser for wavelength control of lidar systems

17
NASA Laser Risk Reduction Program
  • Differential Absorption Lidar (DIAL)
  • Carbon Dioxide
  • Ozone

Wavelength Conversion
Space Qualification
Pump Diodes
Laser Design
  • Doppler Lidar
  • Wind Fields
  • River Flow

Heat Removal (All Conductive)
Laser Physics
OPO/OPA
Performance
Contamination
Materials
SHG/THG
Compact
Packaging
Heritage derived from both Earth and Solar System
apps.
Modeling
  • Backscatter Lidar
  • Cloud
  • Aerosol

Optics Damage (2G/3 yr)
Efficiency (Green30 UV20)
Coupling
Energy (1 J)/ Power (10-100W)
Lifetime (2G Shots)
Failure Mechanisms
Beam Quality
Efficiency (4 WPE)
Lifetime Effects
Beam Quality/ Spectrum
Availability (COTS)
  • Laser Altimeter
  • Ice Sheet Mass and Topography
  • Vegetation Canopy
  • Land Topography
  • Ocean Mixed Layer Depth
  • S/C-S/C Ranging

Flight Demonstrations
2-Micron Laser
1-Micron Laser
2003
2007 Missions
18
Enabling Technology Elements
Customers
Laser Transmitter Technologies
Lidar Technologies
Measurements
Y S
UV Wavelength Converter
1-Micron Lidar Transmitter
Clouds/Aerosols
X
X
IR Wavelength Converter
X
Global Winds
X
X
Amplifier
X
X
Chem/Bio Sensing
Frequency Controller
CO2 Profiling
X
19
Laser Risk Reduction Program
  • Pump Laser Diodes Risk Reduction
  • LaRC to advance diodes in 790 nm wavelength
    region
  • Lifetime and characterization testing
  • Radiation testing performed at GSFC
  • Conductively cooled laser
  • 2-micron partially conductively-cooled laser is
    precursor to fully conductively-cooled
    space-capable design
  • Contamination
  • GSFC Contamination protocols will be made
    available to support the contamination lifetime
    study and tests at LaRC
  • Non-Linear Material OPO Modeling
  • LaRC to develop high peak power OPOs
  • Non-linear materials to be included in diode
    radiation test
  • Design and Packaging
  • Packaging methodology for space flight-capable
    laser

A
B
C
D
E
20
Laser Risk Reduction ProgramLaRC Component
C Contamination Lifetime Study and Tests
Material Res Quantum Mech. Modeling
Rad Damage Tests
Laser Resonator Power Efficiency
Multi-Joule 12Hz 2-micron Transmitter Laser
Global Winds CO2
E Packaging (Flight-Hardened System)
B Conductively-Cooled Laser Head
Laser Amplifier
Laser Oscillator
A Rad Th/Vac Tests
Test/Charact. Facility
Life Test Quality
Test Perf./Reliability
Laser Diodes Availability Life/Quality
A Advance Laser Diode Technologies
A Contamination Handling Protocols
Define Reqmts Innovations
Qualification Procedures
Low-Noise Detector for CO2 Meas.
Characterization Facilities
Receiver Subsystem Efficiency Size/Mass
Lightweight Scanning Telescope
Global Ozone
Highly-Efficient Heterodyne Receiver
Define Reqmts Innovations
Dual Pump Parametric Oscillator
D Non-linear material OPO modeling
Wavelength Conversion Power Efficiency
100mJ _at_ 100Hz 308nm 320nm 2 efficiency
Efficient conversion to UV
Damage/Rad/ Life Tests
Packaging
Lab Demo High Power Conversion to UV
Normal Mode Intra-cavity SHG Pump Laser
21
Laser Risk Reduction Program2-micron technology
roadmap
Partially conductively-cooled osc
1.5J, 2Hz Partially conductively-cooled 2-micron
laser
Laser Resonator Design
Partially conductively-cooled laser head
Validation tool
Partially conductively-cooled amp
Design Lessons
Design Lessons
Design Lessons
Fully conductively-cooled osc
1.5J, 10Hz Fully conductively-cooled 2-micron
laser
Space-capable design
Fully conductively-cooled laser head
Fully conductively-cooled amp
22
2-Micron Pulsed Transmitter Laser
Objective Develop a high energy, high
efficiency, conductively-cooled solid-state
2-micron laser for space lidar applications. Appli
cation Measurement of global CO2 and winds from
LEO.
1 J
  • Accomplishments
  • Successful demonstration of Ho,TmLuLF laser
    system with 1050 mJ Q-switched output energy.
    This was accomplished by one power oscillator and
    two amplifiers operating in double pulse mode.
    Single-pulse output is 0.6 J.
  • Notional space-based wind profiling missions
    require pulse energies from 1 to 5 J, depending
    on the scenario
  • Milestone achieved with 2-Hz PRF gt12 Hz desired
    for LEO

23
Pump Laser Diode Advancement and Validation
Objective
  • Develop state-of-the-art characterization and
    life-time test facility and address 792-nm laser
    diode issues
  • Limited reliability and lifetime
  • Lack of statistical and analytical bases for
    performance and lifetime prediction
  • Limited commercial availability
  • Develop advanced laser diode array (LDA)
    architectures with improved efficiency and
    thermal characteristics

Thermal Image of Diamond LDA
Accomplishments Fabricated and tested an
advanced LDA package utilizing diamond substrate
and heatsink. Demonstrated 17 reduction in
thermal resistance relative to the
standard BeO/Cu package that can translate to
increased lifetime and reliability.
Diamond Package cools 36 faster
24
LRRP Recent Accomplishments
  • Reached 150 mJ (record) of UV at 320 nm with 10
    (record) 1µm-UV efficiency reached 115 mJ at 308
    nm
  • Developed innovative UV generation architectures
  • Critical to trop ozone profile measurement from
    space

25
Laser Risk Reduction Program- Collaborations
  • Current partnerships and collaborations
  • JPL
  • Tunable LO Laser
  • Integrated Receiver
  • VLOC, CVI
  • Optics
  • Coatings
  • Coherent, CEO,
  • Laser Diodes
  • Northrop Gruman
  • Solid State Lasers

LaRC GSFC
NASA Laser/Lidar Risk Reduction Program
  • Swales, UMD
  • Cond. Cool. Pkg.
  • DOE
  • UV Laser
  • ITT
  • UV Laser
  • JHU, APL
  • Non Linear Op
  • Schafer,
  • Plasma Processes
  • Lightweight Telescopes
  • Sci. Material
  • Laser Crystals
  • Boston College
  • Quan. Mech. Model.
  • DOD
  • Laser Diodes,
  • EO Scanner
  • Industry
  • University
  • Government

26
Proposal for a Multi-Agency AORS Consortium
  • National Consortium for Excellence in Active
    Optical Remote Sensing (AORS)
  • Purpose To establish and maintain critical
    national expertise needed to ensure long term
    progress in AORS mount compelling case for new
    USG initiative in FY05-06 timeframe
  • Participants
  • A multi-agency entity (e.g., NASA, NOAA, IPO,
    DoD, DoE, FAA, Homeland)
  • Engages members of academia and industry
  • Approach
  • Leverages complementary activities ongoing in
    each of those organizations
  • Primary interchange through open discussions

27
Proposed Consortium Partners and
Measurement Needs
Clouds/Aerosols Wind Trop. Chemistry Carbon
dioxide Biomass Water Vapor Land/Ice
Topography Wake Vortices Ocean Mixed Layer Solar
System Science
NSF
Chem-Bio Detection Aviation Safety Wake
Vortices Turbulence Wind Shear
Academia
Industry
NASA
FAA
Chem-Bio Det Aerosols Wind Aviation Safety
Multi-Agency Active Optical Remote Sensing
Consortium
Wind Water Vapor CO2 Aerosols
Home- land
NOAA
Wind Humidity Aerosols
Wind Aerosols Chem-Bio Detection Target
Recognition Tactical Imaging
IPO
DoD
DoE
Water Vapor Chem- Bio Detection Clouds and
Aerosols
28
Consortium Structure
Executive Council
Steering Committee
Working Groups
Clouds/ Aerosols
Ranging
Aviation Safety
  • NASA
  • USGS
  • DOD
  • Homeland
  • NOAA
  • NASA
  • IPO
  • DOD
  • Homeland
  • NASA
  • FAA
  • DOD
  • Homeland

Water Vapor
Wake Vortices
  • NOAA
  • NASA
  • IPO
  • DOE
  • EPA
  • FAA
  • NASA
  • DOD

29
Advanced AORS Technology Elements
AORS System Demonstration Packaging
Hardening Flight Validation
DETECTOR
TELESCOPE
SCANNER
RECEIVER
LASER LASER
1 micron Laser Testbed 2 micron Laser Testbed
Wavelength Conversion Laser Diode Pump Space Hardening Packaging Wavelength Conversion Laser Diode Pump Space Hardening Packaging
Auto-Alignment
POINTING
30
Summary
  • Developing AORS technology supports NASAs Vision
    and Mission and enables a key building block
  • A focused technology effort will enable the
    promise of AORS by closing critical remaining
    gaps in capability
  • AORS will address key high resolution measurement
    needs within Codes Y and S and support other
    national needs

31
Backup Charts
32
Technology Roadmap 2-micron UV Sources
33
LRRP Recent Accomplishments
  • Developed diode laser characterization facility
  • Diagnostics to understand failure modes of solid
    state lasers
  • Enables active wind CO2 measurement from space

34
LRRP Recent Accomplishments
792 nm Diamond Package LDA
Diamond Package dissipates excess heat more
efficiently than standard BeO/Cu package
resulting in increased lifetime.
Thermal resistance of diamond package is 17
lower than BeO/Cu package
Pulsewidth 0.1 1.0 msec Current 80 A Rep
Rate 10 Hz Op Temp 15oC
35
Thermal Characteristics of Diamond LDA
  • Enables all lidar measurements

Diamond Package cools 36 faster
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