112 research outputs found
The Actuator Design and the Experimental Tests of a New Technology Large Deformable Mirror for Visible Wavelengths Adaptive Optics
Recently, Adaptive Secondary Mirrors showed excellent on-sky results in the
Near Infrared wavelengths. They currently provide 30mm inter-actuator spacing
and about 1 kHz bandwidth. Pushing these devices to be operated at visible
wavelengths is a challenging task. Compared to the current systems, working in
the infrared, the more demanding requirements are the higher spatial resolution
and the greater correction bandwidth. In fact, the turbulence scale is shorter
and the parameter variation is faster. Typically, the former is not larger than
25 mm (projected on the secondary mirror) and the latter is 2 kHz, therefore
the actuator has to be more slender and faster than the current ones. With a
soft magnetic composite core, a dual-stator and a single-mover, VRALA, the
actuator discussed in this paper, attains unprecedented performances with a
negligible thermal impact. Pre-shaping the current required to deliver a given
stroke greatly simplifies the control system, whose output supplies the current
generator. As the inductance depends on the mover position, the electronics of
this generator, provided with an inductance measure circuit, works also as a
displacement sensor, supplying the control system with an accurate feed-back
signal. A preliminary prototype, built according to the several FEA
thermo-magnetic analyses, has undergone some preliminary laboratory tests. The
results of these checks, matching the design results in terms of power and
force, show that the the magnetic design addresses the severe specifications
Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor sensitivity loss factor estimation in partial correction regime
In typical adaptive optics applications, the atmospheric residual turbulence affects the wavefront sensor response decreasing its sensitivity. On the other hand, wavefront sensors are generally calibrated in diffraction limited condition, and, so, the interaction matrix sensitivity may differ from the closed loop one. The ratio between the two sensitivities, that we will call the sensitivity loss factor, has to be estimated to retrieve a well-calibrated measurement. The spots size measurement could give a good estimation, but it is limited to systems with spots well sampled and uniform across the pupil. We present an algorithm to estimate the sensitivity loss factor from closed loop data, based on the known parameters of the closed loop transfer functions. Here we preferred for simplicity the Shack-Hartmann WFS, but the algorithm we propose can be extended to other WFSs
Non-modulated pyramid wavefront sensor: Why, how and when to use it to sense and correct atmospheric turbulence
Context. The diffusion of adaptive optics systems in astronomical
instrumentation for large ground based telescopes is rapidly increasing and the
pyramid wavefront sensor is replacing the Shack-Hartmann as standard solution
for single conjugate adaptive optics systems. The pyramid wavefront sensor is
typically used with a tip/tilt modulation to increase the linearity range of
the sensor, but the non-modulated case is interesting because it maximizes the
sensor sensitivity. The latter case is generally avoided for the reduced
linearity range that prevents robust operation in the presence of atmospheric
turbulence.
Aims. We aim to solve part of the issues of the non-modulated pyramid
wavefront sensor by reducing the model error in the interaction matrix. We
linearize the sensor response in the working conditions without extending the
sensor linearity range.
Methods. We introduce a new calibration approach to model the response of
pyramid wave front sensor in partial correction, where the working conditions
in the presence of residual turbulence is considered.
Results. We show how in simulations, through the new calibration approach,
the pyramid wave front sensor without modulation can be used to sense and
correct atmospheric turbulence and when this case is preferable to the
modulated case.Comment: 12 pages with 18 figures; accepted for publication in A&
MAVIS: system modelling and performance prediction
The MCAO Assisted Visible Imager and Spectrograph (MAVIS) Adaptive Optics
Module has very demanding goals to support science in the optical: providing
15% SR in V band on a large FoV of 30arcsec diameter in standard atmospheric
conditions at Paranal. It will be able to work in closed loop on up to three
natural guide stars down to H=19, providing a sky coverage larger than 50% in
the south galactic pole. Such goals and the exploration of a large MCAO system
parameters space have required a combination of analytical and end- to-end
simulations to assess performance, sky coverage and drive the design. In this
work we report baseline performance, statistical sky coverage and parameters
sensitivity analysis done in the phase-A instrument study.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, 7 tables. SPIE conference Astronomical
Telescopes and Instrumentation, 14 - 18 December 2020, digital foru
Modeling VRALA, The Next-Generation Actuator For High-Density, Tick Secondary Mirrors For Astronomy
The next-generation of Extremely Large Telescopes adaptive optics systems require high-order, long-stroke, quite large deformable mirrors. Higher forces and greater actuator densities than the ones provided by the current technology are needed, still maintaining the severe accuracy and bandwidth requests. Based on a very simple magnetic circuit, providing a compact device, the VRALA actuator accomplishes this very demanding goal. With an efficiency of about 7 N/W and an overall radius that allows actuator separations as low as 25 mm, the deformable mirror can be actuated with large forces on small spatial scales, with a little thermal impact, and/or its thickness can be increased, in order to simplify the manufacturing
The numerical simulation tool for the MAORY multiconjugate adaptive optics system
The Multiconjugate Adaptive Optics RelaY (MAORY) is and Adaptive Optics
module to be mounted on the ESO European-Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT). It
is a hybrid Natural and Laser Guide System that will perform the correction of
the atmospheric turbulence volume above the telescope feeding the Multi-AO
Imaging Camera for Deep Observations Near Infrared spectro-imager (MICADO). We
developed an end-to-end Monte- Carlo adaptive optics simulation tool to
investigate the performance of a the MAORY and the calibration, acquisition,
operation strategies. MAORY will implement Multiconjugate Adaptive Optics
combining Laser Guide Stars (LGS) and Natural Guide Stars (NGS) measurements.
The simulation tool implements the various aspect of the MAORY in an end to end
fashion. The code has been developed using IDL and uses libraries in C++ and
CUDA for efficiency improvements. Here we recall the code architecture, we
describe the modeled instrument components and the control strategies
implemented in the code.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, Proceeding 9909 310 of the conference SPIE
Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation 2016, 26 June 1 July 2016
Edinburgh, Scotland, U
MAORY AO performances
The Multi-conjugate Adaptive Optics RelaY (MAORY) should provide 30% SR in K
band (50% goal) on half of the sky at the South Galactic Pole. Assessing its
performance and the sensitivity to parameter variations during the design phase
is a fundamental step for the engineering of such a complex system. This step,
centered on numerical simulations, is the connection between the performance
requirements and the Adaptive Optics system configuration. In this work we
present MAORY configuration and performance and we justify theAdaptive Optics
system design choices.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 1 table. SPIE conference Astronomical Telescopes
and Instrumentation, 14 - 18 December 2020, digital foru
Rolling shutter-induced aberrations in laser guide star wavefront sensing
Laser guide star (LGS) Shack-Hartmann (SH) wavefront sensors for next-generation Extremely Large Telescopes (ELTs) require low-noise, large format ( 1/41 Mpx), fast detectors to match the need for a large number of subapertures and a good sampling of the very elongated spots. One path envisaged to fulfill this need has been the adoption of complementary metal metal-oxide semiconductor detectors with a rolling shutter read-out scheme that allows low read-out noise and fast readout time at the cost of image distortion due to the detector rows exposed in different moments. Here, we analyze the impact of the rolling shutter read-out scheme when used for LGS SH wavefront sensing; in particular, we focus on the impact on the adaptive optics (AO) correction of the distortion-induced aberrations created by the rolling exposure in the case of fast varying aberrations, like the ones coming from the LGS tilt jitter due to the up-link propagation of laser beams. We show that the LGS jitter-induced aberration for an ELT can be as large as 100-nm root-mean-square, a significant term in the wavefront error budget of a typical AO system on an ELT, and we discuss possible mitigation strategies
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