When light is transmitted through the atmosphere, it can scatter off turbulent vortex filaments in the air that have
different densities and indices of refraction. These filaments, or eddies, are distributed through a turbulent air flow and
their scale size represents the boundary between an energy cascade down size scales that ends in viscous energy
dissipation. We are measuring with high spatial and temporal precision spatial and temporal correlation functions that
reveal the turbulence dynamics and inner scale in conditions of single scattering. In essence, we can "see" the shadows
of individual turbulent vortices. These measurements are made over short path lengths in conditions of known
Reynold's number and average temperature. By changing the characteristics of the air flow in a volume, different length
scales can be associated with different conditions. This creates a "fingerprint" that characterizes the turbulence.
The performance of free space optical (FSO) links in a clear atmosphere is affected by the non-ideal characteristics of
the communication channel. Atmospheric turbulence causes fluctuations in the received signal level, which increase the
bit errors in a digital communication link. In order to quantify performance limitations, a better understanding of the
effect of the intensity fluctuations on the received signal at all turbulence levels is needed. Theory reliably describes the
behavior in the weak turbulence regime, but theoretical descriptions in the intermediate and strong turbulence regimes
are less well developed. We have developed a flexible empirical approach for characterizing link performance in strong
turbulence conditions through image analysis of intensity scintillation patterns coupled with frame aperture averaging on
an FSO communication link. These measurements are complemented with direct measurements of temporal and spatial
correlation functions. A He-Ne laser beam propagates 106 meters in free-space over flat terrain about a meter above the
ground to provide strong atmospheric turbulence conditions. A high performance digital camera with a frame-grabbing
computer interface is used to capture received laser intensity distributions at rates up to 30 frames per second and various
short shutter speeds, down to 1/16,000s per frame. A scintillometer is used for accurate measurements of the turbulence
parameter Cn2. Laboratory measurements use a local strong turbulence generator, which mimics a strong phase screen.
Spatial correlation functions are measured using laterally separated point detectors placed in the receiver plane.
Correlations and captured image frames are analyzed in Labview to evaluate correlation functions, Cn2, and the aperture
averaging factor. The aperture averaging results demonstrate the expected reduction in intensity fluctuations with
increasing aperture diameter, and show quantitatively the differences in behavior between various strengths of
turbulence. This paper will present accurate empirical data in the strong turbulence regime. Such results can help build
upon existing empirical data and lead to the development of new theories.
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