Filament- and plasma-grating-induced breakdown spectroscopy (F-GIBS) was demonstrated as an efficient technique for sensitive detection of metals in water, where plasma gratings were established through synchronized nonlinear interaction of two noncollinear filaments and an additional filament was generated with another fs laser beam propagating along their bisector. A water jet was constructed vertically to the three co-planar filaments, overcoming side effects from violent plasma explosion and bubble generation. Three distinct regimes of different mechanisms were validated for nonlinear couplings of the third filament with plasma gratings. As the third filament was temporally overlapped with the two noncollinear filaments in the interaction zone, all the three filaments participated in synchronous nonlinear interaction and plasma grating structures were altered by the addition of the third filament. As the third filament was positively or negatively delayed, the as-formed plasma gratings were elongated by the delayed third filament, or plasma gratings were formed in the presence of plasma expansion of the ahead third filament, respectively. Using F-GIBS for trace metal detection in water, significant spectral line enhancements were observed.
Rational harmonic mode-locking refers to a mode-locking state achieved at the modulation frequency that doesn’t match the fundamental frequency. In this paper, we investigated and experimentally achieved rational harmonic mode-locking in optoelectronic oscillators (OEO) for the first time through three schemes based on electric amplitude modulator (AM), electric phase modulator (PM), and Mach-Zehnder modulator (MZM), respectively. In the experiment, the fundamental frequency mode-locking as well as the 2nd-order, 3rd-order, and 4th-order rational harmonic mode-locking were obtained, all generating ultrashort microwave pulses with a repetition rate of 95 kHz and a carrier frequency of 10 GHz. Subsequently, the characteristics of the pulse signals generated by different schemes, such as pulse width, pulse amplitude, and spectral width, were systematically investigated. By comparison, we found that the AM-based mode-locked OEO generates microwave pulse signals with higher stability and narrower pulse width; the PM-based mode-locked OEO can excite more longitudinal modes in the cavity but generates signals with more spurious noise; the MZM-based mode-locked OEO has a simple structure and requires lower power of the modulation signal. We believe this paper could provide some reference for the research on the physical mechanism of the mode-locking phenomenon generated in the OEO when the modulation frequency is mismatched.
Frequency-swept interferometry (FSI) is intrinsically suitable for static ranging. For dynamic targets, its ranging accuracy is deteriorated by the Doppler phenomenon, and its measurement rate is restricted by the frequency sweep rate (usually kHz level), which prevents the acquisition of accurate time-varying distance details. To solve the problems, a novel microwave-photonic dynamic FSI (MP-DFSI) for fast ranging is proposed in this paper, which uses a single-frequency laser and an electro-optic modulator (EOM) to constitute a dual-sweep laser to provide two ideal mirrored laser sweeps. The instantaneous phases of the MP-DFSI signals are modulated by both the target distance and velocity in measurement, we investigate and model the modulation relationship, present a new data fusion demodulation method for high-accuracy fast ranging, which can effectively eliminate the Doppler error and recover the continuously-varying distance at each sampling point during a whole frequency-sweep cycle. Numerical verifications demonstrate that the measurement rate of the proposed MP-DFSI can reach 10 MHz with 1 μm ranging accuracy, showing the MP-DFSI has the ability of high-accuracy fast-ranging for dynamic targets.
The detection system of external radiation source radar system has good maneuverability, concealment and anti-electronic interference ability, because it uses navigation satellite signal as transmitting source and does not emit electromagnetic wave. The airborne radar system detects a target by receiving a secondary reflection signal from navigation satellite signal to the target. Because the navigation satellite is too far away from the target, and the target echo signal received by radar system is weaker than a clutter wave. Its clutter spectrum is more complex than that of the monostatic radar, so it is much more difficult for signal processing. By the geometric frame of the navigation satellite, the airborne radar system and the target, clutter scattering model is established. The clutter range rings are simulated with different length of baselines. The space-time clutter spectrum is theory analyzed and simulated. The corresponding theory and simulation analysis is carried out to lay a theoretical foundation for clutter suppression of radar system.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.