Paper
20 May 2011 Long wave infrared (8 to 14 microns) hyperspectral imager based on an uncooled thermal camera and the traditional CI block interferometer (SI-LWIR-UC)
Dario Cabib, Moshe Lavi, Amir Gil, Uri Milman
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Abstract
Since the early '90's CI has been involved in the development of FTIR hyperspectral imagers based on a Sagnac or similar type of interferometer. CI also pioneered the commercialization of such hyperspectral imagers in those years. After having developed a visible version based on a CCD in the early '90's (taken on by a spin-off company for biomedical applications) and a 3 to 5 micron infrared version based on a cooled InSb camera in 2008, it is now developing an LWIR version based on an uncooled camera for the 8 to 14 microns range. In this paper we will present design features and expected performance of the system. The instrument is designed to be rugged for field use, yield a relatively high spectral resolution of 8 cm-1, an IFOV of 0.5 mrad., a 640x480 pixel spectral cube in less than a minute and a noise equivalent spectral radiance of 40 nW/cm2/sr/cm-1 at 10μ. The actually measured performance will be presented in a future paper.
© (2011) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Dario Cabib, Moshe Lavi, Amir Gil, and Uri Milman "Long wave infrared (8 to 14 microns) hyperspectral imager based on an uncooled thermal camera and the traditional CI block interferometer (SI-LWIR-UC)", Proc. SPIE 8012, Infrared Technology and Applications XXXVII, 80123H (20 May 2011); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.884135
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Imaging systems

Sensors

Interferometers

Infrared imaging

Cameras

Infrared radiation

Spectral resolution

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