Abstract

We describe a Calibrated Hyperspectral Image Projector (CHIP) intended for radiometric testing of instruments ranging from complex hyperspectral or multispectral imagers to simple filter radiometers. The CHIP, based on the same digital mirror arrays used in commercial Digital Light Processing (DLP) displays, is capable of projecting any combination of as many as approximately one hundred different arbitrarily programmable basis spectra per frame into each pixel of the instrument under test (IUT). The resulting spectral and spatial content of the image entering the IUT can simulate, at typical video frame rates and integration times, realistic scenes to which the IUT will be exposed during use, and its spectral radiance can be calibrated with a spectroradiometer. Use of such generated scenes in a controlled laboratory setting would alleviate expensive field testing, allow better separation of environmental effects from instrumental effects and enable system-level performance testing and validation of space-flight instruments prior to launch. Example applications are system-level testing of complex hyperspectral imaging instruments and algorithms with realistic scenes and testing the performance of first-responder cameras under simulated adverse conditions. We have built and tested a successful prototype of the spectral engine, a primary component of the CHIP, that generates arbitrary, programmable spectra in the 1000 nm to 2500 nm spectral range. We have also built a spectral engine operating at visible wavelengths to be discussed in a separate publication. Here we present an overview of this technology and its applications and discuss experimental performance results of our prototype infrared spectral engine.

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