SBIR-STTR Award

Multiple Images Spatial Turbulence Imager (MISTI)
Award last edited on: 4/13/2023

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
DOD : AF
Total Award Amount
$2,944,558
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
AF071-340
Principal Investigator
Larry Pezzaniti

Company Information

Polaris Sensor Technologies Inc (AKA: PST)

200 Westside Square Suite 320
Huntsville, AL 35801
   (256) 562-0087
   info@polarissensor.com
   www.polarissensor.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 05
County: Madison

Phase I

Contract Number: FA9101-07-M-0009
Start Date: 4/19/2007    Completed: 1/19/2008
Phase I year
2007
Phase I Amount
$99,327
Polarization can offer opportunities for additional discriminants for a variety of space based applications including SSA, tracking threat missiles in the boost and mid-course phases of their trajectory, target detection and discrimination, surveillance, communications, and earth remote sensing. A means to test these systems requires the ability to simulate the polarization of representative scenes with the appropriate uniform and cold background of space and to correct for effects of the optics in current space chambers. Polaris Sensor Technologies, Inc. is proposing to first design, construct, and integrate a scene projector polarization controller (SPPC) that will be able to produce a linear polarization state. The sources can be any combination of the sources available currently or in the future to the AEDC Space Sensor Test Chambers user. Polaris will demonstrate the concept in Phase I. Secondly, Polaris will design an imaging polarimetric system that will be used to characterize the scene projector system. Such a characterization system is required in order to understand the scene projector system polarization so that those effects may be corrected in the polarized scene projection system. Both steps are needed in order to present calibrated polarized scenes to the SUT.

Keywords:
Polarization, Scene Projector, Polarization Control, Stokes Vector, Beam Combination, Missile Defense, Target Discrimination

Phase II

Contract Number: FA9101-08-C-0037
Start Date: 9/29/2008    Completed: 6/20/2011
Phase II year
2008
(last award dollars: 2022)
Phase II Amount
$2,845,231

Polaris will first design, construct, and integrate a scene projector polarization controller (SPPC) that will be able to produce an arbitrarily defined linear polarization state, both in magnitude and orientation, for IR scenes. Development of the system through a successful Phase II will result in a useful module for use in a variety of HWIL test facilities. This technology demonstration will serve as the starting point for commercialization at other HWIL facilities.

Keywords:
Polarized Scenes, Missile Defense, Tactical Polarized Scenes, Scene Generator, Infrared ---------- Because of the maneuvering capabilities of adversaries’ new hypersonic weapons, defensive missiles must fly in very demanding flight regimes, and intercept maneuvers place stringent requirements on interceptor seeker systems. Successfully completing the hit-to-kill end game requires the seeker can either compensate for or perform despite the thermal and optical effects that cause the seeker to misreport the target state vector. To ensure the seeker can overcome these effects, robust and detailed modeling is required that can predict seeker performance in all expected flight conditions. Robust modeling requires, in turn, the ability to validate and anchor the model output by appropriate and relevant ground testing that emulates flight conditions as closely as possible. Ground testing can not only validate the models but can improve their predictions if better input data are available. In this Phase II STTR effort, Polaris Sensor Technologies is proposing to develop, test and demonstrate a new measurement technique that provides a data product that improves the modeling capability through ground test validation. This technique enables more credible and flexible modeling for flight conditions that cannot be tested on the ground. This technique leverages the polarization beam combining and splitting used in the Phase I SBIR (Topic AF071-340, Contract FA9101-07-M-009). In this effort, Polaris designed a scene projector polarization controller (SPPC) that produced an arbitrarily defined linear polarization state for test chamber sources. Also during Phase I, Polaris designed an imaging system for characterizing test facility sources. In a subsequent Phase II, Polaris developed the proposed optical system for the 7 V and 10 V chambers. The underlying concept of the SPPC forms the core of the technology proposed here, which will also be used to produce controlled states for measurements in test chambers. The current effort adds the capability of two wavefront sensors (WFSs) and synchronized pulsed lasers to achieve the additional measurements. In the proposed system, two distinct instantiations of the flow in the wind tunnel can be imaged with a specified time delay, td­ . The laser pulse is short enough to effectively freeze the flow, and the WFS image gives a snapshot optical phase screen. The real strength of the technique arises when td­ is set such that the flow moves along the window only a small fraction of the window length. By performing a correlation on the two images, the turbulence correlation length LC and density ?’ can be determined directly. By doing this repeatedly, the distribution of LC and ?’ can be built up, which replaces the flow field characterization in the aero-optic model with measured data that were previously derived from the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model of the wind tunnel. This technique is the Multiple Image Spatial Phase Polarization Collection (SPPC) Turbulence Imager (MISTI) and details follow. Approved for Public Release | 20-MDA-10601 (19 Oct 20)