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A Short Introduction to Adaptive Optics Presentation for NGAO Controls Team Erik Johansson August 28, 2008 Overview • • • • • • • • • Why we need AO The basics of AO Intro to wavefront sensing Intro to tip-tilt correction Intro to higher-order wavefront correction LGS vs NGS AO Limitations of AO How NGAO will differ form our current AO system Q&A 2 Why do we need AO? Short exposure images of the stars Gamma Perseus and Alpha Orionis (Betelgeuse) demonstrate the effects of atmospheric turbulence 3 Without atmosphere, the telescope forms a perfect “diffraction-limited” spot in the focal plane Light from distant star Telescope aperture Focal Plane Image Spot size = 2.44 l/D 4 The atmosphere acts like many lenses of size r0 to create moving “speckles” in the image Light from distant star Atmosphere (lens size = r0) Telescope aperture Focal Plane Freeze the speckles by using short exposures < ~0.1 sec Image r0 is characteristic size of the atmosphere Number of speckles ~ (D/r0)2 Spot size = 2.44 l/r0 First characterized by Fried in 1966 What is D/r0 for Keck? 5 A broad optical bandwidth smears the speckles out in a radial fashion Narrowband Broadband (Credit C. Neyman, AMOS) 6 Details of diffraction from circular aperture 1) Amplitude First zero at r = 1.22 l / D 2) Intensity FWHM l/D 7 8 Diffraction pattern from hexagonal Keck telescope Stars at Galactic Center Ghez: Keck laser guide star AO 9 What is a spatial frequency? A sheet with a sinusoidal “wave” which can vary in frequency (wavelength) and orientation (direction) A spatial frequency also has phase: its peaks and valleys have some kind of reference to a known point in the image 10 How does the atmosphere affect system performance? Telescope OTF Seeing Limited TF Tip-Tilt Compensated TF For D/r0 = 15 Normalized Spatial Frequency 11 The Basics of AO How does AO work? AO corrects distorted wavefronts in real time to compensate for blurring effects of the atmosphere 13 What do AO and flying potato chips have in common? 14 Intro to Wavefront Sensing How do we measure wavefronts? Detectors cannot measure the phase of the light, only the intensity. 16 17 Intro to Tip-Tilt Correction Tip-tilt correction Mirror Disturbance Vector Tip-Tilt Mirror Controller Tip-Tilt Sensor Residual Tip-Tilt Error (arc-sec) S Control law Servo S Rotation (UTT only) Mirror Position Commands (arc-sec) Closed-loop Mirror Positioning Controller (CLMP) Telemetry Recorder (TRS) Angular Offset (DT Ctrl Offset) Control law Parameters Loop cmd Mirror Offset Variable Rotation Angle 19 Closed Loop Mirror Positioning Closed-Loop Mirror Positioning Controller Atmospheric Tip-Tilt Controller Mirror Position Commands (arc-sec) Arc-sec to actuator space conversion Digital to Analog Converter PID Servo Current Mirror Position Conversion Matrix Bridge Sensors High voltage Amplifier High voltage Actuator Signals Mirror Actuators Strain Gauge Outputs Servo Parameters 20 Intro to Wavefront Reconstruction and Correction 22 23 WFC main data flow Raw frames Centroids Subap intensity Wave Wave Front Sensor (WFS) Camera Front Residual WF error RSS Residual WF Error Tip-tilt error WFS focus error Processor Actuator vector DM focus (WFP) Background Compensation WFS HW IF Flat Field Compensation Centroid Computation Telemetry Recorder (TRS) MatrixVector Multiply DM HW IF Deformable Mirror (DM) Tip-tilt Tip-tilt Controllers (DTT/UTT) Control law Servo Pixel threshold error WFS parameters Background image Flat field Intensity threshold Centroid gain Centroid origin Reconstruction Matrix Control law Parameters Loop command Actuator map DM origin 24 How a deformable mirror works (idealization) BEFORE Incoming Wave with Aberration Deformable Mirror AFTER Corrected Wavefront 25 Deformable Mirror for real wavefronts 26 Most deformable mirrors today have thin glass face-sheets Glass face-sheet Light Cables leading to mirror’s power supply (where voltage is applied) PZT or PMN actuators: get longer and shorter as voltage is changed Anti-reflection coating 27 Front view of Xinetics DM (Keck) 349 degrees of freedom; ~250 in use at any one time (paper coasters) 28 What are MEMs deformable mirrors? A promising new class of deformable mirrors, called MEMs DMs, has emerged in the past few years. Devices fabricated using semiconductor batch processing technology and low power electrostatic actuation. Potential to be very inexpensive ($10/actuator instead of $1000/actuator) MEMS: micro micro-electro electro-mechanical systems Boston University MEMS Concept Electrostatically actuated diaphragm Attachment post Membrane mirror Continuous mirror Boston University Boston MicroMachines • Fabrication: Silicon micromachining (structural silicon and sacrificial oxide) • Actuation: Electrostatic parallel plates NGS vs LGS AO NGS AO Control Light from Telescope Telescope pointing offload Tip/tilt NGS IR transmissive dichroic Science Camera Offload focus to telescope Wavefront Controller beamSplitter WFS NGS Reconstructor Centroid Origins Flux Rot & pupil angle When TT closed LGS AO Control Light from Telescope Telescope pointing offload Tip/tilt LGS NGS IR transmissive dichroic Science Camera Offload focus to telescope Sodium transmissive dichroic Wavefront Controller STRAP Lenslets WFS LBWFS Focus Optimized centroids offsets Tip/tilt to Laser LGS Reconstructor Laser TT mirror TSS x,y,z stage Laser Orientation Spot size & flux Rot & pupil angle When DM closed Laser pointing offload Limitations of AO • Isoplanatism – Tip-Tilt Isoplanatism – Focus isoplanatism • Sky coverage – WFS sensitivity – TT sensor sensitivity • Imaging wavelength • Controller bandwidth • Error budgets, and more… 34 What determines how close the reference star has to be? Reference Star Turbulence has to be Science Object similar on path to reference star and to science object Common path has to be large Turbulence z Anisoplanatism sets a limit to distance of reference star from the science object Common Atmospheric Path Telescope Expression for isoplanatic angle 0 • Strehl = 0.38 at = 0 0 is isoplanatic angle 3 / 5 2 8/3 2 5/3 0 2.914 k (sec ) dz CN (z) z 0 0 is weighted by high-altitude turbulence (z5/3) • If turbulence is only at low altitude, overlap is very high. Common Path • If there is strong turbulence at high altitude, not much is in common path Telescope Anisoplanatism: how does AO image degrade as you move farther from guide star? credit: R. Dekany, Caltech • Composite J, H, K band image, 30 second exposure in each band • Field of view is 40”x40” (at 0.04 arc sec/pixel) • On-axis K-band Strehl ~ 40%, falling to 25% at field corner 37 AO image of sun in visible light: 11 second exposure Fair Seeing Poor high altitude conditions From T. Rimmele 38 AO image of sun in visible light: 11 second exposure Good seeing Good high altitude conditions From T. Rimmele 39 Focus Anisoplanatism:The laser doesn’t sample all the turbulence 40 Additional slides from Claire Max’s UCSC Class NGWFC Results Successes: Old vs. new Some of the best images of a 7th magnitude star taken with the old WFC (left) and the NGWFC (right). The images have K-band Strehls of 58% and 66% respectively. Strehl record: 71% at K-band Limiting magnitude: R=16 43 NGS performance exceeds expectations 60+% Strehl for R=14 guide star Requirement was to meet or exceed 30% Strehl for 14th magnitude guide star in good seeing (r0 ≥ 20 cm). Strehl record: 71% at K-band Limiting magnitude: R=16 44 LGS performance has improved as well • LGS AO results during especially good seeing. • Best performance increased from 44% to 51% Strehl in K. • Limiting magnitude R=19 45 Improved performance on Brown Dwarfs J-band image of a brown dwarf binary pair with separation of 80 mas (Michael Liu, 26 March 2007). 46 Best LGS AO images of the galactic center K-band image of the Galactic Center in LGS AO (left) and NGS AO (right). Credit: Andrea Ghez, Jessica Lu. 47 Extended Objects • J, H and K’ color composite o Uranus (left). The inset on the top left is an enlarged image of Miranda at K’. • H and K’ color composite of Neptune (middle) • K’ image of Titan (right). 48 Uranus ring crossing The rings of Uranus as observed with the Keck AO system since 2004. Optically-thick rings like disappear due to inter-particle shadowing; optically-thin rings like brighten. Credit: Imke de Pater. 49 Improved NGS/LGS crossover point LGS perf NGS perf • We are now able to use NGS in observing scenarios where we used LGS before and get better performance 50