Paper
21 September 2004 Airborne laser-diode-array illuminator assessment for the night vision's airborne mine-detection arid test
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Airborne Littoral Reconnaissance Technologies (ALRT) project has developed and tested a nighttime operational minefield detection capability using commercial off-the-shelf high-power Laser Diode Arrays (LDAs). The Coastal System Station’s ALRT project, under funding from the Office of Naval Research (ONR), has been designing, developing, integrating, and testing commercial arrays using a Cessna airborne platform over the last several years. This has led to the development of the Airborne Laser Diode Array Illuminator wide field-of-view (ALDAI-W) imaging test bed system. The ALRT project tested ALDAI-W at the Army’s Night Vision Lab’s Airborne Mine Detection Arid Test. By participating in Night Vision’s test, ALRT was able to collect initial prototype nighttime operational data using ALDAI-W, showing impressive results and pioneering the way for final test bed demonstration conducted in September 2003. This paper describes the ALDAI-W Arid Test and results, along with processing steps used to generate imagery.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Suzanne Stetson, Hadley Weber, Frank J. Crosby, Kenneth Tinsley, Edmund Kloess, Andrew J. Nevis, John H. Holloway Jr., and Ned H. Witherspoon "Airborne laser-diode-array illuminator assessment for the night vision's airborne mine-detection arid test", Proc. SPIE 5415, Detection and Remediation Technologies for Mines and Minelike Targets IX, (21 September 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.583146
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KEYWORDS
Land mines

Cameras

Night vision

Target detection

Detection and tracking algorithms

Semiconductor lasers

Fiber optic illuminators

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