Optical stimulators are essential for performing validation and verification of spaceborne optical systems, allowing realistic, hardware-in-the-loop testing under controlled conditions. These facilities bridge the domain gap between synthetic image rendering and real mission data, ensuring a close-to-real evaluation of image processing algorithm performance. An open challenge in their use is the reproduction of radiometric-equivalent images that faithfully replicate in-space acquisitions. This work presents a detailed methodology for the radiometric calibration of optical stimulators, enabling the high-fidelity emulation of both resolved and pointwise objects. The proposed methodology is applied to two different testbeds and validated using an industrial camera and a high-technology-readiness-level star tracker. Experimental results demonstrate the accuracy of the proposed framework in reproducing realistic scenes, including detailed hardware-specific optical effects that are often beyond the scope of conventional rendering tools.

On the Radiometric Calibration of Optical Hardware-in-the-Loop Stimulators

Ornati, Fabio;Panicucci, Paolo;Pizzetti, Andrea;Topputo, Francesco
2026-01-01

Abstract

Optical stimulators are essential for performing validation and verification of spaceborne optical systems, allowing realistic, hardware-in-the-loop testing under controlled conditions. These facilities bridge the domain gap between synthetic image rendering and real mission data, ensuring a close-to-real evaluation of image processing algorithm performance. An open challenge in their use is the reproduction of radiometric-equivalent images that faithfully replicate in-space acquisitions. This work presents a detailed methodology for the radiometric calibration of optical stimulators, enabling the high-fidelity emulation of both resolved and pointwise objects. The proposed methodology is applied to two different testbeds and validated using an industrial camera and a high-technology-readiness-level star tracker. Experimental results demonstrate the accuracy of the proposed framework in reproducing realistic scenes, including detailed hardware-specific optical effects that are often beyond the scope of conventional rendering tools.
2026
Attitude Control
Image Processing
Algorithms and Data Structures
Planetary Bodies
Optical Properties
Probability Distribution Functions
Boltzmann's Constant
Space Operations
Semiconductor Diodes
Asteroids
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1314148
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