Paper
1 December 1991 Electron-beam-addressed membrane light modulator for IR scene projection
Thomas N. Horsky, Craig M. Schiller, George J. Genetti, Daniel M. O'Mara, Whitney S. Hamnett, Cardinal Warde
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Abstract
The electron-beam-addressed membrane light modulator is a computer-controlled display device that allows the production of high-resolution, flickerless, dynamic infrared (IR) scenes. The projector consists of the membrane light modulator and an IR schlieren readout optical train. The light modulator is composed of a high-resolution scanning electron gun, a collector grid, and a special charge-transfer-plate anode onto which is bonded a highly reflective deformable membrane mirror. In a prototype device built at Optron Systems, readout of the system with a Helium-Neon laser operating at 3.39 micrometers has produced IR images with a contrast ratio of 40:1, a resolution of 100 television lines, and a membrane response time of 1 microsecond(s) . The goal of the next-generation device is 256 X 256 resolution elements, 100 Hz frame rate and a contrast ratio of > 100:1. We will describe the operating principles of the device, its performance characteristics, and its applications.
© (1991) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Thomas N. Horsky, Craig M. Schiller, George J. Genetti, Daniel M. O'Mara, Whitney S. Hamnett, and Cardinal Warde "Electron-beam-addressed membrane light modulator for IR scene projection", Proc. SPIE 1540, Infrared Technology XVII, (1 December 1991); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.48761
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Modulators

Projection systems

Spatial light modulators

Chromium

Mirrors

Video

Adaptive optics

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