Paper
9 December 1994 Compact version of the Atmospheric Lidar Instrument (ATLID)
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Abstract
ATLID is a spaceborne backscatter LIDAR using a solid-state Nd-YAG laser (1.06 micrometers wavelength) and a 0.6 m diameter telescope. It is intended to fly on-board a polar platform satellite. The selected concept consists in a lightweight scanning telescope associated to a contra-rotative flywheel. A linear scanning (+/- 23 degree(s)) is used in order to achieve the required swathwidth (700 Km). The detector is a silicon Avalanche Photodiode. The instrument has been compacted to a similar volume as for currently developed ENVISAT-1 instruments. The thermal control is designed to be independent of the neighbor instruments, thus allowing ATLID to be mounted on a multi-instrument payload. A breadboarding program has been initiated for critical parts of the instrument. This paper describes the overall instrument architecture, as well as first breadboard results.
© (1994) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Didier Morancais "Compact version of the Atmospheric Lidar Instrument (ATLID)", Proc. SPIE 2310, Lidar Techniques for Remote Sensing, (9 December 1994); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.195872
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KEYWORDS
Space telescopes

LIDAR

Telescopes

Interfaces

Sensors

Mirrors

Optical filters

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