693 research outputs found
The Asymmetric Pupil Fourier Wavefront Sensor
This paper introduces a novel wavefront sensing approach that relies on the
Fourier analysis of a single conventional direct image. In the high Strehl
ratio regime, the relation between the phase measured in the Fourier plane and
the wavefront errors in the pupil can be linearized, as was shown in a previous
work that introduced the notion of generalized closure-phase, or kernel-phase.
The technique, to be usable as presented requires two conditions to be met: (1)
the wavefront errors must be kept small (of the order of one radian or less)
and (2) the pupil must include some asymmetry, that can be introduced with a
mask, for the problem to become solvable. Simulations show that this asymmetric
pupil Fourier wavefront sensing or APF-WFS technique can improve the Strehl
ratio from 50 to over 90 % in just a few iterations, with excellent photon
noise sensitivity properties, suggesting that on-sky close loop APF-WFS is
possible with an extreme adaptive optics system.Comment: 5 figures, accepted for publication by PAS
Kernel-phases for high-contrast detection beyond the resolution limit
The detection of high contrast companions at small angular separation appears
feasible in conventional direct images using the self-calibration properties of
interferometric observable quantities. In the high-Strehl regime, available
from space borne observatories and using AO in the mid-infrared, quantities
comparable to the closure-phase that are used with great success in
non-redundant masking inteferometry, can be extracted from direct images, even
taken with a redundant aperture. These new phase-noise immune observable
quantities, called Kernel-phases, are determined a-priori from the knowledge of
the geometry of the pupil only. Re-analysis of HST/NICMOS archive and other
ground based AO images, using this new Kernel-phase algorithm, demonstrates the
power of the method, and its ability to detect companions at the resolution
limit and beyond.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 2011 SPIE conference proceeding
Closed-loop focal plane wavefront control with the SCExAO instrument
This article describes the implementation of a focal plane based wavefront
control loop on the high-contrast imaging instrument SCExAO (Subaru
Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics). The sensor relies on the Fourier
analysis of conventional focal-plane images acquired after an asymmetric mask
is introduced in the pupil of the instrument. This absolute sensor is used here
in a closed-loop to compensate the non-common path errors that normally affects
any imaging system relying on an upstream adaptive optics system.This specific
implementation was used to control low order modes corresponding to eight
zernike modes (from focus to spherical). This loop was successfully run on-sky
at the Subaru Telescope and is used to offset the SCExAO deformable mirror
shape used as a zero-point by the high-order wavefront sensor. The paper
precises the range of errors this wavefront sensing approach can operate within
and explores the impact of saturation of the data and how it can be bypassed,
at a cost in performance. Beyond this application, because of its low hardware
impact, APF-WFS can easily be ported in a wide variety of wavefront sensing
contexts, for ground- as well space-borne telescopes, and for telescope pupils
that can be continuous, segmented or even sparse. The technique is powerful
because it measures the wavefront where it really matters, at the level of the
science detector.Comment: 9 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication by A&
Direct imaging with highly diluted apertures. I. Field of view limitations
Future optical interferometric instrumentation mainly relies on the
availability of an efficient cophasing system: once available, what has so far
postponed the relevance of direct imaging with an interferometer will vanish.
This paper focuses on the actual limits of snapshot imaging, inherent to the
use of a sparse aperture: the number of telescopes and the geometry of the
array impose the maximum extent of the field of view and the complexity of the
sources. A second limitation may arise from the beam combination scheme.
Comparing already available solutions, we show that the so called
hypertelescope mode (or densified pupil) is ideal. By adjusting the direct
imaging field of view to the useful field of view offered by the array, the
hypertelescope makes an optimal use of the collected photons. It optimizes
signal to noise ratio, drastically improves the luminosity of images and makes
the interferometer compatible with coronagraphy, without inducing any loss of
useful field of view.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS.
Full-resolution version available at
http://www.obs-hp.fr/~lardiere/publi/2006-Lardiere-MNRAS.pd
Teaching Economics among other Social Sciences? The issue of Pluralism in the Struggles surrounding the Economic and Social Sciences Curricula in the French High School since 1967.
Purpose: This article aims at presenting the original design of the teaching of Economic and Social Sciences (SES) in the French High School and at demonstrating that the issue of pluralism lies at the core of the various controversies surrounding it since its creation.Approach: This article is based on more than 40 interviews with SES teachers and key personalities, on curricula and official reports analyses and on a ten years participating observation in the SES teachers professional association.Findings: This text strives to display how the defence of pluralism has become a core issue to SES teachers, as a “mobilized group” as well as in their individual professional practices.Research implications: Such statements may be deepen in two directions. The first consists in comparing the French situation to that in other countries as regards the teaching of economics and social sciences in high school. The second may imply to investigate deeper about teachers’ training and practices about such issues. Practical implications: The other aim of this text is raising debates about the objectives of teaching economics and social sciences in general in high school in a context where school is more and more committed to strengthening citizenship as well as preparing for higher education and professional life
Speckle Control with a remapped-pupil PIAA-coronagraph
The PIAA is a now well demonstrated high contrast technique that uses an
intermediate remapping of the pupil for high contrast coronagraphy
(apodization), before restoring it to recover classical imaging capabilities.
This paper presents the first demonstration of complete speckle control loop
with one such PIAA coronagraph. We show the presence of a complete set of
remapping optics (the so-called PIAA and matching inverse PIAA) is transparent
to the wavefront control algorithm. Simple focal plane based wavefront control
algorithms can thus be employed, without the need to model remapping effects.
Using the Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme AO (SCExAO) instrument built for the
Subaru Telescope, we show that a complete PIAA-coronagraph is compatible with a
simple implementation of a speckle nulling technique, and demonstrate the
benefit of the PIAA for high contrast imaging at small angular separation.Comment: 6 figures, submitted to PAS
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