Publications
Development and application of spherically curved charge-coupled device imagers
Summary
Summary
Operation of a CCD imager on a curved focal surface offers advantages to flat focal planes, especially for lightweight, relatively simple optical systems. The first advantage is that the modulation transfer function can approach diffraction-limited performance for a spherical focal surface employed in large field-of-view or large-format imagers. The second...
30 to 50 ns liquid-crystal optical switches
Summary
Summary
The optical switching time of twisted-nematic liquid-crystal cells using the liquid crystals, 5CB (C,H,,-Ph-Ph-CN), 50CB(C,Hw O-Ph-Ph-CN) and PCH5 (C,H,,-Cy-Ph-CN) have been characterized as a function of temperature, prebias voltage and switching voltage, V. The transition time from 90 % to 10 % transmission scales as V-1.9 and is limited to...
Lincoln Laboratory high-speed solid-state imager technology
Summary
Summary
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Lincoln Laboratory (MIT LL) has been developing both continuous and burst solid-state focal-plane-array technology for a variety of high-speed imaging applications. For continuous imaging, a 128 ¿ 128-pixel charge coupled device (CCD) has been fabricated with multiple output ports for operating rates greater than 10,000 frames...
Dynamic response of an electronically shuttered CCD imager
Summary
Summary
The dynamic response of an electronically shuttered charge-coupled device (CCD) imager to nanosecond voltage pulses has been investigated. Measurements show that the shutter can be dynamically opened and closed in nanosecond times. For the shutter opening, simulations indicate that the collection of photoelectrons occurs in times much shorter than that...
High-speed, electronically shuttered solid-state imager technology
Summary
Summary
Electronically shuttered solid-state imagers are being developed for high-speed imaging applications. A 5 cmx5 cm, 512x512-element, multiframe charge-coupled device (CCD) imager has been fabricated for the Los Alamos National Laboratory DARHT facility that collects four sequential image frames at megahertz rates. To operate at fast frame rates with high sensitivity...