RESUMO
The effect of realistic atmospheric conditions on mid-IR (λ = 3.9â µm) and long-wave-IR (λ = 10â µm) laser-induced avalanche breakdown for the remote detection of radioactive material is examined experimentally and with propagation simulations. Our short-range in-lab mid-IR laser experiments show a correlation between increasing turbulence level and a reduced number of breakdown sites associated with a reduction in the portion of the focal volume above the breakdown threshold. Simulations of propagation through turbulence are in excellent agreement with these measurements and provide code validation. We then simulate propagation through realistic atmospheric turbulence over a long range (0.1-1â km) in the long-wave-IR regime (λ = 10â µm). The avalanche threshold focal volume is found to be robust even in the presence of strong turbulence, only dropping by â¼50% over a propagation length of â¼0.6â km. We also experimentally assess the impact of aerosols on avalanche-based detection, finding that, while background counts increase, a useful signal is extractable even at aerosol concentrations 105 times greater than what is typically observed in atmospheric conditions. Our results show promise for the long-range detection of radioactive sources under realistic atmospheric conditions.