Single shot line-of-sight atmospheric turbulence profiling for laser satellite communications with STORM

Journal Article (2025)
Author(s)

Marguerite Arvis (TU Delft - Space Systems Egineering)

Simone Ciarella (The Netherlands eScience Center)

Jérôme Loicq (TU Delft - Spaceborne Instrumentation)

Rudolf Saathof (TU Delft - Space Systems Egineering)

Research Group
Space Systems Egineering
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1364/AO.572341 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Research Group
Space Systems Egineering
Journal title
Applied Optics
Issue number
32
Volume number
64
Pages (from-to)
9586-9597
Downloads counter
15
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Abstract

Laser satellite communication technologies are promising next-generation communications systems, offering higher data rates, more secure links, and cost-effective operations. One of the remaining challenges to tackle for ensuring sufficient link availability is atmospheric turbulence. While turbulence effects on laser links can be partly compensated for with corrective technologies and algorithms, these methods would benefit from better knowledge of turbulence profiles on the communications channel, both for system design or real-time assistance during operations. As state-of-the-art turbulence profilers are not designed to measure profiles from a laser beam on a moving satellite, this paper proposes a line-of-sight turbulence profiling tool tailored for laser satellite communications. Speckle-based turbulence observation and reconstruction via machine learning uses surrogate learning to build a model that can reconstruct optical turbulence profiles (Cn2(h)) from a single shot measurement of a speckle pattern. In this paper, the first modeling results of this flexible approach demonstrate that eight-layer turbulence profiles can be reconstructed from simulated single speckle images of a star with less than 10% error on the Fried parameter.

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