New Laser Technique to Help Track and Identify Space Debris

Posted  by GoPhotonics

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From chips of old rocket paint, to shards of solar panels, and entire dead satellites, the space is filled with hundreds of millions of pieces of space junk orbiting the Earth. This cloud of high-tech detritus whirls around the planet at about 17,500 miles per hour and at these speeds a trash even as small as a pebble can torpedo a passing spacecraft. NASA and the U.S. Department of Defense are have been using ground-based telescopes and laser radars (ladars) to track more than 17,000 orbital debris objects to help prevent collisions with operating missions. Such ladars shine high-powered lasers at target objects, measuring the time it takes for the laser pulse to return to Earth, to pinpoint debris in the sky.

Now aerospace engineers from MIT have developed a laser sensing technique that can decipher not only where but what kind of space junk may be passing overhead. For example, the technique, called laser polarimetry, may be used to discern whether a piece of debris is bare metal or covered with paint. The difference, the engineers say, could help determine an object's mass, momentum, and potential for destruction. In space, things just tend to break up over time, and there have been two major collisions over the last 10 years that have caused pretty significant spikes in debris. If one can figure out what a piece of debris is made of one can immediately track how heavy it is and how quickly it could deorbit over time or hit something else.

The team's technique uses a laser to measure a material's effect on the polarization state of light, which refers to the orientation of light's oscillating electric field that reflects off the material. For instance, when the sun's rays reflect off a rubber ball, the incoming light's electric field may oscillate vertically. But certain properties of the ball's surface, such as its roughness, may cause it to reflect with a horizontal oscillation instead, or in a completely different orientation. The same material can have multiple polarization effects, depending on the angle at which light hits it.

A material such as paint could have a different polarization "signature," reflecting laser light in patterns that are distinct from the patterns of, say, bare aluminum. Polarization signatures therefore could be a reliable way for scientists to identify the composition of orbital debris in space. To test this theory, researchers set up a benchtop polarimeter—an apparatus that measures, at many different angles, the polarization of laser light as it reflects off a material. The team used a high-powered laser beam with a wavelength of 1,064 nanometers, similar to the lasers used in existing ground-based ladars to track orbital debris. The laser was horizontally polarized, meaning that its light oscillated along a horizontal plane. They then used polarization filtering optics and silicon detectors to measure the polarization states of the reflected light.

In choosing materials to analyze, researchers picked six that are commonly used in satellites: white and black paint, aluminum, titanium, and Kapton and Teflon—two filmlike materials used to shield satellites. Each sample was placed in the experimental apparatus, which was motorized so measurements could be made at different angles and geometries, and then measured its polarization effects. In addition to reflecting light with same polarization as the incident light, materials can also display other, stranger polarization behaviors, such as rotating the light's oscillation slightly—a phenomenon called retardance. Researchers identified 16 main polarization states, then took note of which efffects a given material exhibited as it reflected laser light.

Each material had a suffiiciently unique polarization signature to distinguish it from the other five samples. It is believed that other aerospace materials, such as various shielding films, or composite materials for antennas, solar cells, and circuit boards, may also exhibit unique polarization effects. Its hoped that scientists can use laser polarimetry to establish a library of materials with unique polarization signatures. By adding certain filters to lasers on existing groundbased ladars, scientists can measure the polarization states of passing debris and match them to a library of signatures to determine the object's composition.

While there are already a lot of facilities on the ground for tracking debris as it is, the point of this technique is, while doing that, one might as well put some filters on detectors that detect polarization changes, and it's those polarization features that can help infer what the material is made of and can provide more information, basically for free. Click here to read the published paper.


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