Extreme Adaptive Optics Imaging with a Clear and Well‐Corrected Off‐Axis Telescope Subaperture
2007; IOP Publishing; Volume: 658; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1086/511949
ISSN1538-4357
AutoresEugene Serabyn, J. Kent Wallace, Mitchell Troy, Bertrand Mennesson, Pierre Haguenauer, Robert O. Gappinger, Rick Burruss,
Tópico(s)Advanced optical system design
ResumoRather than using an adaptive optics (AO) system to correct a telescope s entire pupil, it can instead be used to more finely correct a smaller sub-aperture. Indeed, existing AO systems can be used to correct a sub-aperture 1/3 to 1/2 the size of a 5-10 m telescope to extreme adaptive optics (ExAO) levels. We discuss the potential performance of a clear off-axis well-corrected sub-aperture (WCS), and describe our initial imaging results with a 1.5 m diameter WCS on the Palomar Observatory s Hale telescope. These include measured Strehl ratios of 0.92-0.94 in the infrared (2.17 microns), and 0.12 in the B band, the latter allowing a binary of separation 0.34 arc sec to be easily resolved in the blue. Such performance levels enable a variety of novel observational modes, such as infrared ExAO, visible-wavelength AO, and high-contrast coronagraphy. One specific application suggested by the high Strehl ratio stability obtained (1%) is the measurement of planetary transits and eclipses. Also described is a simple dark-hole experiment carried out on a binary star, in which a comatic phase term was applied directly to the deformable mirror, in order to shift the diffraction rings to one side of the point spread function.
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