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Tuesday, April 29, 2025
- 11:00 AM1hCREOL Seminar: Jeremy Bos, Michigan Technological UniversityTitle: Eyes on the Sky, Nowhere to Hide: Challenges in Full Sky Space Domain Awareness and CommunicationsAbstract: When satellites are lower than thirty degrees above the horizon, the non-negligible path length through the atmosphere exceeds 100 km. Operations in this regime are sometimes referred to as being "in the soup" because turbulence effects dominate both seeing and optical communications. Seeing conditions here are dominated by volume effects and loss of spatial coherence, while laser beam propagation enters the "deep" turbulence regime. Both cases operate at or beyond the margins of established theory. Additionally, whether operating on ground or in space, size, weight, and power (SWaP) restrictions are often chief concerns.In this talk, I address the problem of imaging space objects at low elevation angles via a combination of spatial and angular partitioning of the aperture. I demonstrate that in extreme anisoplanatic imaging conditions, overlapping angular viewpoint images allow snapshot light-field scene recovery and atmospheric tomography. I will also discuss how the atmosphere impacts coherent synthetic aperture imaging techniques from the ground. The performance of both techniques depends on the atmospheric outer scale size and models thereof. This outer scale also figures prominently in understanding discrepancies between theories, measurements, and simulation of optical scintillation caused by the atmosphere. Finally, I will show how modular aperture designs may allow for conformal geometries, as well as reduced SWaP and increased robustness in both ground and space based communications.About the Speaker: Jeremy Bos is an Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Michigan Technological University. Before joining Michigan Tech, Bos worked as a NRC Postdoctoral Fellow under the Research Associateship Program with the US Air Force Research Lab in Kihei, Hawai'i. He received his PhD and BS from Michigan Tech in 2012 and 2000 respectively and his MS from Villanova University in 2003. Prior to returning to academia Bos spent ten years working as an engineer in the defense and automotive industries. He is a senior member of Optica, IEEE, and a Fellow of SPIE. Bos is an author on over 100 scholarly contributions including 7 patents. His research interests are in atmospheric optics, laser beam propagation, beam direction, and scene recovery.
- 11:00 AM1hCREOL Seminar: Jeremy Bos, Michigan Technological UniversityTitle: Eyes on the Sky, Nowhere to Hide: Challenges in Full Sky Space Domain Awareness and CommunicationsAbstract: When satellites are lower than thirty degrees above the horizon, the non-negligible path length through the atmosphere exceeds 100 km. Operations in this regime are sometimes referred to as being "in the soup" because turbulence effects dominate both seeing and optical communications. Seeing conditions here are dominated by volume effects and loss of spatial coherence, while laser beam propagation enters the "deep" turbulence regime. Both cases operate at or beyond the margins of established theory. Additionally, whether operating on ground or in space, size, weight, and power (SWaP) restrictions are often chief concerns.In this talk, I address the problem of imaging space objects at low elevation angles via a combination of spatial and angular partitioning of the aperture. I demonstrate that in extreme anisoplanatic imaging conditions, overlapping angular viewpoint images allow snapshot light-field scene recovery and atmospheric tomography. I will also discuss how the atmosphere impacts coherent synthetic aperture imaging techniques from the ground. The performance of both techniques depends on the atmospheric outer scale size and models thereof. This outer scale also figures prominently in understanding discrepancies between theories, measurements, and simulation of optical scintillation caused by the atmosphere. Finally, I will show how modular aperture designs may allow for conformal geometries, as well as reduced SWaP and increased robustness in both ground and space based communications.About the Speaker: Jeremy Bos is an Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Michigan Technological University. Before joining Michigan Tech, Bos worked as a NRC Postdoctoral Fellow under the Research Associateship Program with the US Air Force Research Lab in Kihei, Hawai'i. He received his PhD and BS from Michigan Tech in 2012 and 2000 respectively and his MS from Villanova University in 2003. Prior to returning to academia Bos spent ten years working as an engineer in the defense and automotive industries. He is a senior member of Optica, IEEE, and a Fellow of SPIE. Bos is an author on over 100 scholarly contributions including 7 patents. His research interests are in atmospheric optics, laser beam propagation, beam direction, and scene recovery.
- 11:00 AM5hTasty Tuesdays - Downtown Food TrucksEvery Tuesday this spring, we will be welcoming a different food truck onto campus to provide additional food options for campus. Plus, during the lunch hour, we will highlight a different campus service or resource.Check the [@ithappensdt Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/ithappensdt) each week to see what truck will be on campus and to check out their menu!
- 11:00 AM6hBig Red Bus - Donate Blood Today!Help us maintain a safe and ready blood supply for cancer patients, trauma patients, or when unexpected tragedies occur. The OneBlood bus will park on Memory Mall near the Veterans Memorial.Walk-ups are welcomed, and appointments are appreciated! Registration Link: https://donor.oneblood.org/donor/schedules/drive_schedule/1621307 Registration Info: Save time - Schedule your appointment now!
- 11:00 AM6hBig Red Bus - Donate Blood Today!Help us maintain a safe and ready blood supply for cancer patients, trauma patients, or when unexpected tragedies occur. The OneBlood bus will park on Memory Mall near the Veterans Memorial.Walk-ups are welcomed, and appointments are appreciated! Registration Link: https://donor.oneblood.org/donor/schedules/drive_schedule/1621307 Registration Info: Save time - Schedule your appointment now!
- 6:30 PM3hUCF Baseball vs. North FloridaThe UCF baseball team hosts North Florida at John Euliano Park at 6:30 p.m. on Orlando trivia night.UCF students attend for free with valid UCF ID.2025 season promotional schedule: [ucfknights.com/news/2025/02/6/2025-baseball-promo-schedule-released](https://ucfknights.com/news/2025/02/6/2025-baseball-promo-schedule-released)Single-game Tickets: [www.ticketmaster.com/ucf-knights-baseball-tickets/artist/1208324](https://www.ticketmaster.com/ucf-knights-baseball-tickets/artist/1208324)For more information about UCF Baseball, visit: [ucfknights.com/sports/baseball](https://ucfknights.com/sports/baseball)
- 6:30 PM3hUCF Baseball vs. North FloridaThe UCF baseball team hosts North Florida at John Euliano Park at 6:30 p.m. on Orlando trivia night.UCF students attend for free with valid UCF ID.2025 season promotional schedule: [ucfknights.com/news/2025/02/6/2025-baseball-promo-schedule-released](https://ucfknights.com/news/2025/02/6/2025-baseball-promo-schedule-released)Single-game Tickets: [www.ticketmaster.com/ucf-knights-baseball-tickets/artist/1208324](https://www.ticketmaster.com/ucf-knights-baseball-tickets/artist/1208324)For more information about UCF Baseball, visit: [ucfknights.com/sports/baseball](https://ucfknights.com/sports/baseball)