Paper
10 October 2001 Analysis of the effects of 1/f noise and choppers on the performance of DC-coupled thermal imaging systems
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Abstract
It has long been known that 1/f noise is the bane of staring thermal imaging systems because the detector pixels are sampled at a low data rate. In the frequency range between about one Hertz and an upper limit set by the eye integration time, 1/f noise is quite distracting and detrimental to real-world system performance to an extent greater than would be expected from its impact on NETD. For very low frequencies 1/f noise amounts to drift. Because the noise in individual pixels is uncorrelated with noise in other pixels, this appears as a time-varying spatial noise, which degrades system performance more seriously than temporal noise. This paper quantifies these effects and shows that the electrical integration time is a critical factor in the rate at which 1/f noise degrades MRT after calibration. Use of a chopper reduces or eliminates the spatial noise, but with a sensitivity penalty. These results are particularly apropos to uncooled thermal imaging.
© (2001) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Charles M. Hanson "Analysis of the effects of 1/f noise and choppers on the performance of DC-coupled thermal imaging systems", Proc. SPIE 4369, Infrared Technology and Applications XXVII, (10 October 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.445351
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Bolometers

Interference (communication)

Eye

Signal to noise ratio

Thermography

Calibration

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