19 research outputs found
Numerical control matrix rotation for the LINC-NIRVANA Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics system
LINC-NIRVANA will realize the interferometric imaging focal station of the
Large Binocular Telescope. A double Layer Oriented multi-conjugate adaptive
optics system assists the two arms of the interferometer, supplying high order
wave-front correction. In order to counterbalance the field rotation,
mechanical derotation for the two ground wave-front sensors, and optical
derotators for the mid-high layers sensors fix the positions of the focal
planes with respect to the pyramids aboard the wave-front sensors. The
derotation introduces pupil images rotation on the wavefront sensors: the
projection of the deformable mirrors on the sensor consequently change. The
proper adjustment of the control matrix will be applied in real-time through
numerical computation of the new matrix. In this paper we investigate the
temporal and computational aspects related to the pupils rotation, explicitly
computing the wave-front errors that may be generated.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, presented at SPIE Symposium "Astronomical
Telescopes and Instrumentation'' conference "Adaptive Optics Systems
II'',Sunday 27 June 2010, San Diego, California, US
Sensing and control of segmented mirrors with a pyramid wavefront sensor in the presence of spiders
The segmentation of the telescope pupil (by spiders & the segmented M4)
create areas of phase isolated by the width of the spiders on the wavefront
sensor (WFS), breaking the spatial continuity of the wavefront. The poor
sensitivity of the Pyramid WFS (PWFS) to differential piston leads to badly
seen and therefore uncontrollable differential pistons. In close loop
operation, differential pistons between segments will settle around integer
values of the average sensing wavelength. The differential pistons typically
range from one to ten times the sensing wavelength and vary rapidly over time,
leading to extremely poor performance. In addition, aberrations created by
atmospheric turbulence will contain large amounts of differential piston
between the segments. Removing piston contribution over each of the DM segments
leads to poor performance. In an attempt to reduce the impact of unwanted
differential pistons that are injected by the AO correction, we compare three
different approaches. We first limit ourselves to only use the information
measured by the PWFS, in particular by reducing the modulation. We show that
using this information sensibly is important but will not be sufficient. We
discuss possible ways of improvement by using prior information. A second
approach is based on phase closure of the DM commands and assumes the
continuity of the correction wavefront over the entire unsegmented pupil. The
last approach is based on the pair-wise slaving of edge actuators and shows the
best results. We compare the performance of these methods using realistic
end-to-end simulations. We find that pair-wise slaving leads to a small
increase of the total wavefront error, only adding between 20-45 nm RMS in
quadrature for seeing conditions between 0.45-0.85 arcsec. Finally, we discuss
the possibility of combining the different proposed solutions to increase
robustness.Comment: 12 pages, 15 figures, AO4ELT5 Proceedings, Adaptive Optics for
Extremely Large Telescopes 5, Conference Proceeding, Tenerife, Canary
Islands, Spain, June 25-30, 201
Into the Blue: AO Science with MagAO in the Visible
We review astronomical results in the visible ({\lambda}<1{\mu}m) with
adaptive optics. Other than a brief period in the early 1990s, there has been
little astronomical science done in the visible with AO until recently. The
most productive visible AO system to date is our 6.5m Magellan telescope AO
system (MagAO). MagAO is an advanced Adaptive Secondary system at the Magellan
6.5m in Chile. This secondary has 585 actuators with < 1 msec response times
(0.7 ms typically). We use a pyramid wavefront sensor. The relatively small
actuator pitch (~23 cm/subap) allows moderate Strehls to be obtained in the
visible (0.63-1.05 microns). We use a CCD AO science camera called "VisAO".
On-sky long exposures (60s) achieve <30mas resolutions, 30% Strehls at 0.62
microns (r') with the VisAO camera in 0.5" seeing with bright R < 8 mag stars.
These relatively high visible wavelength Strehls are made possible by our
powerful combination of a next generation ASM and a Pyramid WFS with 378
controlled modes and 1000 Hz loop frequency. We'll review the key steps to
having good performance in the visible and review the exciting new AO visible
science opportunities and refereed publications in both broad-band (r,i,z,Y)
and at Halpha for exoplanets, protoplanetary disks, young stars, and emission
line jets. These examples highlight the power of visible AO to probe
circumstellar regions/spatial resolutions that would otherwise require much
larger diameter telescopes with classical infrared AO cameras.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, to appear in Proc. SPIE 914
The Gray Needle: Large Grains in the HD 15115 Debris Disk from LBT/PISCES/Ks and LBTI/LMIRcam/L' Adaptive Optics Imaging
We present diffraction-limited \ks band and \lprime adaptive optics images of
the edge-on debris disk around the nearby F2 star HD 15115, obtained with a
single 8.4 m primary mirror at the Large Binocular Telescope. At \ks band the
disk is detected at signal-to-noise per resolution element (SNRE) \about 3-8
from \about 1-2\fasec 5 (45-113 AU) on the western side, and from \about
1.2-2\fasec 1 (63-90 AU) on the east. At \lprime the disk is detected at SNRE
\about 2.5 from \about 1-1\fasec 45 (45-90 AU) on both sides, implying more
symmetric disk structure at 3.8 \microns . At both wavelengths the disk has a
bow-like shape and is offset from the star to the north by a few AU. A surface
brightness asymmetry exists between the two sides of the disk at \ks band, but
not at \lprime . The surface brightness at \ks band declines inside 1\asec
(\about 45 AU), which may be indicative of a gap in the disk near 1\asec. The
\ks - \lprime disk color, after removal of the stellar color, is mostly grey
for both sides of the disk. This suggests that scattered light is coming from
large dust grains, with 3-10 \microns -sized grains on the east side and 1-10
\microns dust grains on the west. This may suggest that the west side is
composed of smaller dust grains than the east side, which would support the
interpretation that the disk is being dynamically affected by interactions with
the local interstellar medium.Comment: Apj-accepted March 27 2012; minor correction
First Light LBT AO Images of HR 8799 bcde at 1.65 and 3.3 Microns: New Discrepancies between Young Planets and Old Brown Dwarfs
As the only directly imaged multiple planet system, HR 8799 provides a unique
opportunity to study the physical properties of several planets in parallel. In
this paper, we image all four of the HR 8799 planets at H-band and 3.3 microns
with the new LBT adaptive optics system, PISCES, and LBTI/LMIRCam. Our images
offer an unprecedented view of the system, allowing us to obtain H and 3.3$
micron photometry of the innermost planet (for the first time) and put strong
upper-limits on the presence of a hypothetical fifth companion. We find that
all four planets are unexpectedly bright at 3.3 microns compared to the
equilibrium chemistry models used for field brown dwarfs, which predict that
planets should be faint at 3.3 microns due to CH4 opacity. We attempt to model
the planets with thick-cloudy, non-equilibrium chemistry atmospheres, but find
that removing CH4 to fit the 3.3 micron photometry increases the predicted L'
(3.8 microns) flux enough that it is inconsistent with observations. In an
effort to fit the SED of the HR 8799 planets, we construct mixtures of cloudy
atmospheres, which are intended to represent planets covered by clouds of
varying opacity. In this scenario, regions with low opacity look hot and
bright, while regions with high opacity look faint, similar to the patchy cloud
structures on Jupiter and L/T transition brown-dwarfs. Our mixed cloud models
reproduce all of the available data, but self-consistent models are still
necessary to demonstrate their viability.Comment: Accepted to Ap
A preliminary overview of the multiconjugate adaptive optics module for the E-ELT
ABSTRACT The multi-conjugate adaptive optics module for the European Extremely Large Telescope has to provide a corrected field of medium to large size (up to 2 arcmin), over the baseline wavelength range 0.8-2.4 µm. The current design is characterized by two post-focal deformable mirrors, that complement the correction provided by the adaptive telescope; the wavefront sensing is performed by means of a high-order multiple laser guide star wavefront sensor and by a loworder natural guide star wavefront sensor. The present status of a two years study for the advanced conceptual design of this module is reported
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The GMT Dynamic Optical Simulation
The Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT) is a gregorian 25.5-meter diameter primary mirror (M1) made of 7 8.4-meter diameter circular aspheric segments. The secondary mirror (M2) is a 1/8th down-scale model of M1 madeof 7 1- meter diameter segments. Each segments has positionners to adjust its 6 rigid body motions. The gureof M1 segment is controlled with 44 bending modes and M2 segments are deformed using 672 actuators. Inthe active and adaptive operation modes of the GMT, around a dozen wavefront sensors (WFS) are selectivelyused to monitor the optical aberrations building-up into the telescope. A dedicated control system feeds backthe WFS measurements to the mirrors actuators to deliver image quality optimized for the eld of view of eachscientic instrument. This paper describes the GMT Dynamic Optical Simulation (DOS) tool. DOS integratesthe optical and mechanical model of the telescope together with the control system. DOS is a cloud-basedoptical propagation software package with build-in models for both geometric and Fourier optics and a fullcontrol algorithm development environment
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Wavefront control simulations for the Giant Magellan Telescope: Field-dependent segment piston control
We present in this paper preliminary simulation results aimed at validating the GMT piston control strategy. Wewill in particular consider an observing mode in which an Adaptive Optics (AO) system is providing fast on-axisWF correction with the Adaptive Secondary Mirror (ASM), while the phasing system using multiple SegmentPiston Sensors (SPS) makes sure that the seven GMT segments remain phased. Simulations have been performedwith the Dynamic Optical Simulation (DOS) tool developed at the GMT Project Oce, which integrates theoptical and mechanical models of GMT. DOS fast ray-tracing capabilities allows us to properly simulate theeect of eld-dependent aberrations, and in particular, the so-called Field Dependent Segment Piston (FDSP)mode arising when a segment tilt on M1 is compensated on-axis by a segment tilt on M2. We will show thatwhen using an asterism of SPS, our scheme can properly control both segment piston and the FDSP mode
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Wavefront control simulations for the Giant Magellan Telescope: Field-dependent segment piston control
We present in this paper preliminary simulation results aimed at validating the GMT piston control strategy. Wewill in particular consider an observing mode in which an Adaptive Optics (AO) system is providing fast on-axisWF correction with the Adaptive Secondary Mirror (ASM), while the phasing system using multiple SegmentPiston Sensors (SPS) makes sure that the seven GMT segments remain phased. Simulations have been performedwith the Dynamic Optical Simulation (DOS) tool developed at the GMT Project Oce, which integrates theoptical and mechanical models of GMT. DOS fast ray-tracing capabilities allows us to properly simulate theeect of eld-dependent aberrations, and in particular, the so-called Field Dependent Segment Piston (FDSP)mode arising when a segment tilt on M1 is compensated on-axis by a segment tilt on M2. We will show thatwhen using an asterism of SPS, our scheme can properly control both segment piston and the FDSP mode
Analysis and mitigation of pupil discontinuities on adaptive optics performance
International audienceAs already noticed in other telescopes, the presence of large telescope spiders and of a segmented deformable mirror in an Adaptive Optics system leads to pupil fragmentation and may create phase discontinuities. On the ELT telescope, a typical effect is the differential piston, where all disconnected areas of the pupil create their own piston, unseen locally but drastically degrading the final image quality. The poor sensitivity of the Pyramid WFS to differential piston will lead to these modes been badly seen and therefore badly controlled by the adaptive optics (AO) loop. In close loop operation, differential pistons between segments will start to appear and settle around integer values of the average sensing wavelength. These additional differential pistons are artificially injected by the adaptive optics control loop but do not have any real physical origin, contrary to the Low Wind Effect. In an attempt to reduce the impact of unwanted differential pistons that are injected by the AO loop, we propose a novel approach based on the pair-wise coupling of the actuators sitting on the edges of the deformable mirror segments. In this paper, we present the correction principle, its performance in nominal seeing condition, and its robustness relative to changing seeing conditions, wind speed and natural guide star magnitude. We show that the edge actuator coupling is a simple and robust solution and that the additional quadratic error relative to the reference case (i.e. no spiders) is of only 40 nm RMS, well within the requirements for HARMONI