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Dive into the research topics where Grady J. Koch is active.

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Featured researches published by Grady J. Koch.


Applied Optics | 2008

Side-line tunable laser transmitter for differential absorption lidar measurements of CO2: design and application to atmospheric measurements.

Grady J. Koch; Jeffrey Y. Beyon; Fabien Gibert; Bruce W. Barnes; Syed Ismail; Mulugeta Petros; Paul Petzar; Jirong Yu; Edward A. Modlin; Kenneth J. Davis; Upendra N. Singh

A 2 microm wavelength, 90 mJ, 5 Hz pulsed Ho laser is described with wavelength control to precisely tune and lock the wavelength at a desired offset up to 2.9 GHz from the center of a CO(2) absorption line. Once detuned from the line center the laser wavelength is actively locked to keep the wavelength within 1.9 MHz standard deviation about the setpoint. This wavelength control allows optimization of the optical depth for a differential absorption lidar (DIAL) measuring atmospheric CO(2) concentrations. The laser transmitter has been coupled with a coherent heterodyne receiver for measurements of CO(2) concentration using aerosol backscatter; wind and aerosols are also measured with the same lidar and provide useful additional information on atmospheric structure. Range-resolved CO(2) measurements were made with <2.4% standard deviation using 500 m range bins and 6.7 min? (1000 pulse pairs) integration time. Measurement of a horizontal column showed a precision of the CO(2) concentration to <0.7% standard deviation using a 30 min? (4500 pulse pairs) integration time, and comparison with a collocated in situ sensor showed the DIAL to measure the same trend of a diurnal variation and to detect shorter time scale CO(2) perturbations. For vertical column measurements the lidar was setup at the WLEF tall tower site in Wisconsin to provide meteorological profiles and to compare the DIAL measurements with the in situ sensors distributed on the tower up to 396 m height. Assuming the DIAL column measurement extending from 153 m altitude to 1353 m altitude should agree with the tower in situ sensor at 396 m altitude, there was a 7.9 ppm rms difference between the DIAL and the in situ sensor using a 30 min? rolling average on the DIAL measurement.


Optical Engineering | 2007

High-energy 2μm Doppler lidar for wind measurements

Grady J. Koch; Jeffrey Y. Beyon; Bruce W. Barnes; Mulugeta Petros; Jirong Yu; Farzin Amzajerdian; Michael J. Kavaya; Upendra N. Singh

A coherent Doppler lidar at 2 m wavelength has been built with higher output energy 100 mJ than previously available. The laser transmitter is based on diode-pumped Ho:Tm:LuLiF, a recently devel- oped laser material that allows more efficient energy extraction. Single- frequency operation is achieved by a ramp-and-fire injection seeding technique. An advanced photodetector architecture is used incorporating photodiodes in a dual-balanced configuration. A digital signal processing system has been built, allowing real-time display of wind and aerosol backscatter data products. The high pulse energy and receiver efficiency provides for measurement of wind fields to ranges not seen before with 2 m lidars, and example wind measurements were made to show this capability.


Optics Letters | 1993

Single-frequency lasing of monolithic Ho,Tm:YLF

Grady J. Koch; John P. Deyst; Mark E. Storm

Single-frequency lasing in monolithic crystals of holmium-thulium-doped YLF (Ho,Tm:YLF) is reported. A maximum single-frequency output power of 6 mW at a wavelength of 2.05 microm is demonstrated. Frequency tuning is also described.


Applied Optics | 2000

Frequency Stabilization of a Ho:Tm:YLF Laser to Absorption Lines of Carbon Dioxide.

Grady J. Koch; Amin N. Dharamsi; Colleen M. Fitzgerald; John C. McCarthy

A single-frequency Ho:Tm:YLF laser, operating at an eye-safe wavelength of 2 mum, has been developed with tuning characteristics optimized for spectroscopy of absorption features. The laser frequency was stabilized to three different absorption lines of carbon dioxide by a wavelength modulation technique. Long-term frequency drift has been eliminated from the laser, and shorter-term jitter has been reduced to within 13.5 MHz of the absorption line center. This stabilized laser is an ideal injection seed source for a differential absorption lidar system for measurement of atmospheric gases.


Applied Optics | 2002

Precise wavelength control of a single-frequency pulsed Ho:Tm:YLF laser

Grady J. Koch; Mulugeta Petros; Jirong Yu; Upendra N. Singh

We demonstrate wavelength control of a single-frequency diode-pumped Ho:Tm:YLF laser by referencing its wavelength to an absorption line of carbon dioxide. We accomplish this wavelength control by injection seeding with a cw Ho:Tm:YLF laser that can be tuned over or stabilized to carbon dioxide or water vapor lines. We show that the pulsed laser can be scanned precisely over an absorption line of carbon dioxide by scanning the injection seed laser wavelength. We locked the pulsed laser to within 18.5 MHz of the absorption line center by stabilizing the injection seed on the line center. The single-frequency pulsed output, intended for use as a transmitter for differential absorption lidar detection of atmospheric carbon dioxide and water vapor and for coherent detection of wind, is 100 mJ per pulse at a 5-Hz repetition rate.


Optical Engineering | 2007

Novel nonlinear adaptive Doppler-shift estimation technique for the coherent Doppler validation lidar

Jeffrey Y. Beyon; Grady J. Koch

The signal-processing aspect of a 2-µm wavelength-coherent Doppler lidar system under development at NASA Langley Research Center in Virginia is investigated in this paper. The system is named VALIDAR (validation lidar), and its signal-processing program estimates and displays various wind parameters in real time as data acquisition occurs. The goal is to improve the quality of the current estimates of power, Doppler shift, wind speed, and wind direction, especially in the low signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) regime. A novel nonlinear adaptive Doppler-shift estimation technique (NADSET) is developed for this purpose, and its performance is analyzed using the wind data acquired over a long period of time by VALIDAR. The quality of Doppler-shift and power estimations by conventional Fourier-transform-based spectrum estimation methods deteriorates rapidly as the SNR decreases. NADSET compensates this deterioration by adaptively utilizing the statistics of Doppler-shift estimates in a strong SNR range and identifying sporadic range bins where good Doppler-shift estimates are found. The authenticity of NADSET is established by comparing the trend of wind parameters with and without NADSET applied to the long-period lidar return data.


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2011

Backscatter 2-

Tamer F. Refaat; Syed Ismail; Grady J. Koch; Manuel Rubio; Terry L. Mack; Anthony Notari; James E Collins; Jasper Lewis; R De Young; Yonghoon Choi; M. Nurul Abedin; Upendra N. Singh

A 2-μm backscatter lidar system has been developed by utilizing tunable pulsed laser and infrared phototransistor for the transmitter and the receiver, respectively. To validate the system, the 2-μm atmospheric backscatter profiles were compared to profiles obtained at 1 and 0.5 μm using avalanche photodiode and photomultiplier tube, respectively. Consequently, a methodology is proposed to compare the performance of different lidar systems operating at different wavelengths through various detection technologies. The methodology is based on extracting the system equivalent detectivity and comparing it to that of the detectors, as well as the ideal background detectivity. Besides, the 2-μm system capability for atmospheric CO2 temporal profiling using the differential absorption lidar (DIAL) technique was demonstrated. This was achieved by tuning the laser at slightly different wavelengths around the CO2 R22 absorption line in the 2.05-μm band. CO2 temporal profiles were also compared to in situ measurements. Preliminary results indicated average mixing ratios close to 390 ppm in the atmospheric boundary layer with 3.0% precision. The development of this system is an initial step for developing a high-resolution, high-precision direct-detection atmospheric CO2 DIAL system. A successful development of this system would be a valuable tool in obtaining and validating global atmospheric CO2 measurements.


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2014

\mu\hbox{m}

Michael J. Kavaya; Jeffrey Y. Beyon; Grady J. Koch; Mulugeta Petros; Paul Petzar; Upendra N. Singh; Bo C. Trieu; Jirong Yu

AbstractThe first airborne wind measurements of a pulsed, 2-μm solid-state, high-energy, wind-profiling lidar system for airborne measurements are presented. The laser pulse energy is the highest to date in an eye-safe airborne wind lidar system. This energy, the 10-Hz laser pulse rate, the 15-cm receiver diameter, and dual-balanced coherent detection together have the potential to provide much-improved lidar sensitivity to low aerosol backscatter levels compared to earlier airborne-pulsed coherent lidar wind systems. Problems with a laser-burned telescope secondary mirror prevented a full demonstration of the lidar’s capability, but the hardware, algorithms, and software were nevertheless all validated. A lidar description, relevant theory, and preliminary results of flight measurements are presented.


Journal of Applied Remote Sensing | 2010

Lidar Validation for Atmospheric

Grady J. Koch; Jeffrey Y. Beyon; Paul E. Petzar; Mulugeta Petros; Jirong Yu; Bo C. Trieu; Michael J. Kavaya; Upendra N. Singh; Edward A. Modlin; Bruce W. Barnes; Belay Demoz

A 2-μm wavelength coherent Doppler lidar for wind measurement has been developed of an unprecedented laser pulse energy of 250-mJ in a rugged package. This high pulse energy is produced by a Ho:Tm:LuLiF laser with an optical amplifier. While the lidar is meant for use as an airborne instrument, ground-based tests were carried out to characterize performance of the lidar. Atmospheric measurements are presented, showing the lidars capability for wind measurement in the atmospheric boundary layer and free troposphere. Lidar wind measurements are compared to a balloon sonde, showing good agreement between the two sensors.


Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering | 2006

\hbox{CO}_{2}

Jeffrey Y. Beyon; Grady J. Koch; Zhiwen Li

The wind parameter estimates from a state-of-the-art 2-μm coherent lidar system located at NASA Langley, Virginia, named VALIDAR (validation lidar), were compared after normalizing the noise by its estimated power spectra via the periodogram and the linear predictive coding (LPC) scheme. The power spectra and the Doppler shift estimates were the main parameter estimates for comparison. Different types of windowing functions were implemented in VALIDAR data processing algorithm and their impact on the wind parameter estimates was observed. Time and frequency independent windowing functions such as Rectangular, Hanning, and Kaiser-Bessel and time and frequency dependent apodized windowing function were compared. The briefing of current nonlinear algorithm development for Doppler shift correction subsequently follows.

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Jeffrey Y. Beyon

California State University

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Jirong Yu

Langley Research Center

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Syed Ismail

Langley Research Center

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Paul Petzar

Science Applications International Corporation

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Bo C. Trieu

Langley Research Center

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