Paul G. Lucey,1,2 Jason Akagi,2 Kellen Yamamoto,2 Aaron Nagamine,2 Chiara Ferrari-Wong,1 Abigail Flom,1 Alaine Leehttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-1545-4529,1 Adam Bingham,2 Edward Knobbe2
1Univ. of Hawaii at Manoa (United States) 2Spectrum Photonics, Inc. (United States)
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We developed a prototype portable LWIR hyperspectral system based on a commercial microbolometer array and a spectral interferometer to test its utility in the field. The complete system with sensor head, tripod, scan motor and batteries weighs 10.5 lbs. Field tests show peak SNR near 250, and spectral analysis was able to detect specific minerals at geologic sites in Arizona. The project showed the feasibility of very low cost LWIR hyperspectral systems.
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Paul G. Lucey, Jason Akagi, Kellen Yamamoto, Aaron Nagamine, Chiara Ferrari-Wong, Abigail Flom, Alaine Lee, Adam Bingham, Edward Knobbe, "Low mass LWIR hyperspectral imagers using microbolometers and Fabry-Perot interferometers," Proc. SPIE 12516, Next-Generation Spectroscopic Technologies XV, 125160V (15 June 2023); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2663722