James B. Johnson,1 Christopher Roll,1 Bayleigh Nugent,1 Jenna Montaguehttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6536-1016,1 Jeromy Lyman,1 Samuel Berger,1 Melissa Brennan,1 Ronald B. Lockwood,1 Michael P. Chrisp,1 Corrie V. Smeaton1
1Massachusetts Institute of Technology (United States)
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The Chrisp Compact Visible-SWIR Spectrometer (CCVIS) was developed by MIT Lincoln Laboratory as a high performance, low Size-Weight-Power (SWAP) slit-based hyperspectral sensor that provides comparable performance to current fielded units but more than an order smaller in packaging volume. The design takes advantage of a flat, immersed grating and a color-corrected catadioptric layout to provide >25mm slit length operating from 380-2500nm. We show results from our efforts to design and build an environmentally robust variant which undergoing Technology Readiness Level 6 testing for future spaceflight.
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James B. Johnson, Christopher Roll, Bayleigh Nugent, Jenna Montague, Jeromy Lyman, Samuel Berger, Melissa Brennan, Ronald B. Lockwood, Michael P. Chrisp, Corrie V. Smeaton, "Development and testing of a ruggedized compact VNIR-SWIR hyperspectral imager for remote sensing," Proc. SPIE 13042, Advanced Optics for Imaging Applications: UV through LWIR IX, 1304209 (7 June 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3013690