Presentation + Paper
5 March 2021 Fine pointing of laser beams by using laser arrays for applications to CubeSats
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A method of fine pointing of laser beams by using laser arrays has been developed. The telescope system combines a lens system and a VCSEL/Photodetector Array. It does not use moving parts. In computer simulations, it is applied to CubeSats that use body pointing. Body pointing was used by the Aerospace Corporation for CubeSats in LEO in NASA’s Optical Communications and Sensors Demonstration (OCSD) program. Computer simulations of this fine pointing capability have been applied previously to CubeSats in the OCSD program. In this paper, computer simulations of laser pointing using this telescope design are applied to CubeSats in LLO, at 100 km. These CubeSats could form part of the LunaNet, the lunar communications and navigation network, part of the NASA ARTEMIS Program. With more accurate pointing, a laser beam with smaller divergence can be used. For the case of the AeroCube-7B vehicle that was used in the OCSD program, computer simulations will show, for example, that the divergence of the output beam can be reduced from approximately 0.06° FWHM to 0.014°. For the proposed electro-optical system, reaction times to pointing changes and vibrations are on a nanosecond time scale, much faster than those for fine pointing systems that use moving parts such as fast steering mirrors, including MEMS, or that use quad-cell photodetectors to improve the body pointing of the CubeSat. Other possible applications are to Optical Multiple Access (OMA) for simultaneously communicating with ground stations at different locations and to Wavelength-Division Multiplexing (WDM) for increasing data rate transmission.
Conference Presentation
© (2021) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Peter M. Goorjian "Fine pointing of laser beams by using laser arrays for applications to CubeSats", Proc. SPIE 11678, Free-Space Laser Communications XXXIII, 116780E (5 March 2021); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2575661
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KEYWORDS
Laser applications

Electro optical systems

Sensors

Computer simulations

Laser development

Lens design

Optical communications

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