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Adaptive Optics for Astronomy Kathy Cooksey AO Basics • Photons – Travel in straight lines • Wavefront – Line perpendicular to all photons’ paths • Atmospheric turbulence – Due to temperature differences – Acts like many lenses – Distorts wavefront • AO System – Corrects wavefront – Makes it linear Photons Travel in Straight Lines Wavefronts Atmospheric Turbulence Atmospheric Turbulence Lick Observatory, 1 m telescope Long exposure image Short exposure image “Perfect” image: diffraction limit of telescope Distant stars should resemble “points” if it were not for turbulence in Earth’s atmosphere Speckle Images • Turbulence changes rapidly with time • Sequence of short snapshots of star • Much slower than real time Applied Optics Group (Imperial College), Herschel 4.2-m Telescope AO Straighten Wavefront BEFORE Incoming, distorted wavefront (“aberrated”) DEFORMABLE MIRROR AFTER Corrected wavefront AO in Action Lick Observatory adaptive optics system QuickTime™ and a None decompressor are needed to see this picture. Star without adaptive optics Star with adaptive optics AO Specifics: Correcting for Atmosphere and Improving Images Even the largest ground-based astronomical telescopes have no better resolution than an 8” backyard telescope! Basic AO Process (a) Measure details of blurring from “guide star” near object you want to observe (b) Calculate shape to apply to deformable mirror to correct blurring (c) Light from both guide star and astronomical object is reflected from deformable mirror Schematic of AO System Gemini: AO in “Action” QuickTime™ and a Sorenson Video decompressor are needed to see this picture. How to Measure Distortion Shack-Hartmann Wavefront Sensor …you will see this again Ground-based AO Complements Space Telescopes Advantages of AO on 8-10 m ground-based telescopes • Four times better spatial resolution in infrared • Better faint-object sensitivity at wavelengths > 2 microns • Outstanding infrared spectroscopy – Higher spectral & spatial resolution Advantages of 2.4 m Hubble Space Telescope • Full wavelength coverage, from UV to visible to nearinfrared light • Can “see” virtually whole sky • More precise brightness measurements • Very sensitive spectroscopy for faint objects in infrared – Lower spectral & spatial resolution Beautiful AO Images Satellites for the Small • Adaptive Optics has opened up study of smaller bodies of solar system Double Asteroid 90 Antiope Merine et al. Keck Eugenia and its moon Merine et al. CFHT Neptune at 1.65 microns With Keck adaptive optics 2.3 arc sec Without adaptive optics May 24, 1999 June 27, 1999 Neptune Movie • AO allows us to monitor weather on outer planets QuickTime™ and a YUV420 codec decompressor are needed to see this picture. Institute for Astronomy (University of Hawaii) CFHT Titan Occults Two Stars • Occultation is when planet or moon passes in front of star QuickTime™ and a YUV420 codec decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a YUV420 codec decompressor are needed to see this picture. Original Titan “subtracted” Lightbridges on Sun • Lightbridges discovered with AO • Those shown are ~5000 km in length QuickTime™ and a YUV420 codec decompressor are needed to see this picture. Sharmer et al. Swedish Solar Vacuum Telescope – Golden Gate ~2 km • Believed to be “normal” solar granulation that penetrates strongly magnetic sunspot umbras AO Reveals Faint Companions to Bright Stars Mike Brown (CalTech) Galactic Center UCLA Galactic Center Group Evidence for Black Hole at Center of Milky Way • Black hole is revealed by presence of fast moving stars at small radii • Stellar orbits in central parsec, 1995-2006 NGC 6934 from Gemini North • Adaptive Optics allows us to discern separate stars in crowded cores of globular clusters Gemini Obs., NSF, & U. Hawaii IfA Summary of Astronomical AO • Remove effect of atmospheric turbulence – “Twinkle” of stars • Must “sense” blurring of star – Either real or laser “star” • Computers calculate how to correct light – Send this signal to deformable mirror • Resulting performance can equal or exceed Hubble Space Telescope in some areas • Astronomers use AO to study asteroids, moons, planets, stars, and galaxies More AO Tidbits Titan’s Surface at Keck Without AO With AO Typical at 1.65 μm At 1.581 μm (surface window) Surface Reflectivity AO image Model image of atmosphere Surface albedo map Model inputs: Haze optical depth Optical properties of haze particles (varies with depth) Model outputs: Image of atmosphere Atmospheric properties: Haze optical depth, variation with altitude AO Image Sequence of 216 Kleopatra • Movie of the asteroid Kleopatra, observed during seven-hour period with CFHT AO System QuickTime™ and a None decompressor are needed to see this picture. Merine et al. CFHT Extra-Solar Planetary System Science with AO • Dust disks as signatures of planetary systems • Close-up views of forming planetary systems • Detection and characterization of planets eXtreme Adaptive Optics Planet Imager • XAOPI project (in progress) • System at Keck observatory • First images of extrasolar planets