John E. Nettleton
United States Department of the Army
51 Papers
324 Citations
John E. Nettleton is an academic researcher from United States Department of the Army. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laser & Laser pumping. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 51 publications.
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Papers
Monoblock laser for a low-cost, eyesafe, microlaser range finder
TL;DR: A small, lightweight, low-cost prototype laser has been developed for use in a microlaser range finder (muLRF), based on a flash-lamp-pumped, Nd:YAG laser with a Cr(4+) passive Q switch.
61
Patent
Duo-frame normalization technique
John E. Nettleton,Dallas N. Barr +1 more
- 17 May 1994
TL;DR: In this article, a transmitter emits a modulated energy pulse which is not gated when received by a single gated imaging camera to obtain an integrated first image frame and gated by the same camera when received as an integrated second image frame.
22
Patent
Adjustable near infrared rangefinder illuminator
John E. Nettleton,Dallas N. Barr,Brian C. Redman +2 more
- 24 Nov 1992
TL;DR: In this article, a near infrared illuminator for enhancing viewing of a target viewed with an infrared viewing device when the target falls within a predetermined range is presented, where a pulse generator generates a laser pulse in the near infrared with a pulse clock for controlling of laser brightness and a pulse frequency adjust for control of laser blink rate.
19
Compact VCSEL pumped Q-switched Nd:YAG lasers
TL;DR: In this paper, a variety of laser designs were explored including a compact passively Q-switched laser that produced a 22mJπulse having a pulse width of <1.5ns, and an actively Qswitched LM that produced 40mJ pulse having a 7 ns pulse width.
19
Patent
Phase shift detection for use in laser radar ranging systems
John E. Nettleton,Dallas N. Barr +1 more
- 29 Jan 1992
TL;DR: In this paper, a laser beam is frequency shifted for use in a laser radar ranging system driving a single optical modulator with multiple drivers to produce several frequency shifted drive frequencies via an afocal lens.
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