An aperture of 21 cm telescope with polarized coaxial for satellite laser ranging

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Abstract

With the development of aerospace and space scientific research, satellite laser ranging (SLR) has put forward higher requirements for response speed, data density, and measurement accuracy. In coaxial common optical path laser ranging, the emitted laser and the received laser echoes pass through the same optical system. Due to the reversibility of the optical path, the laser emission, monitoring, and laser echoes’ optical path all pass through the same optical system structure, and the response speed and ranging ability of the laser ranging system have been greatly improved. Based on the SLR system of the Shanghai Astronomical Observatory (SHAO), the laser transmitting telescope with an aperture of 21 cm was used to build a polarized coaxial SLR system. It uses a picosecond pulsed laser with a pulse repetition frequency of 2 kHz and a single-pulse energy of 2 mJ. Also, a 4f system was applied to shrink the laser echo beam and filter out noise, the measurements of low-Earth orbit and long-distance high-orbit satellites were realized, and the ranging accuracy was ∼2 cm. As far as we know, this is currently the smallest aperture telescope for SLR globally, which is conducive to the miniaturization and integrated development of SLR systems.

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APA

Long, M., Deng, H., Zhang, H., Tan, K., Lin, H. sheng, Wu, Z., & Zhang, Z. (2023, January 11). An aperture of 21 cm telescope with polarized coaxial for satellite laser ranging. Frontiers in Physics. Frontiers Media SA. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2022.1099101

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