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Raman-scattered laser guide star photons to monitor the scatter of astronomical telescope mirrors

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 Publication date 2018
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The first observations of laser guide star photons Raman-scattered by air molecules above the Very Large Telescope (VLT) were reported in June 2017. The initial detection came from the Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) optical integral field spectrograph, following the installation of the 4 Laser Guide Star Facility (4LGSF) on the Unit Telescope 4 (UT4) of the VLT. In this Letter, we delve further into the symbiotic relationship between the 4LGSF laser guide star system, the UT4 telescope, and MUSE by monitoring the spectral contamination of MUSE observations by Raman photons over a 27 month period. This dataset reveals that dust particles deposited on the primary and tertiary mirrors of UT4 -- responsible for a reflectivity loss of ~8% at 6000{AA} -- contribute (60$pm5)% to the laser line fluxes detected by MUSE. The flux of Raman lines, contaminating scientific observations acquired with optical spectrographs, thus provides a new, non-invasive means to monitor the evolving scatter properties of the mirrors of astronomical telescopes equipped with laser guide star systems.

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The new class of large telescopes, as the future ELT, are designed to work with Laser Guide Star (LGS) tuned to a resonance of atmosphere sodium atoms. This wavefront sensing technique presents complex issues for an application to big telescopes due to many reasons mainly linked to the finite distance of the LGS, the launching angle, Tip-tilt indetermination and focus anisoplanatism. The implementation of a laboratory Prototype for LGS wavefront sensor (WFS) at the beginning of the phase study of MAORY, the Multi-conjugate Adaptive Optics RelaY for the ELT first light, has been indispensable to investigate specific mitigation strategies to the LGS WFS issues. This paper shows the test results of LGS WFS Prototype under different working conditions. The accuracy within which the LGS images are generated on the Shack-Hartmann (SH) WFS has been cross-checked with the MAORY simulation code. The experiments show the effect of noise on the centroiding precision, the impact of LGS image truncation on the wavefront sensing accuracy as well as the temporal evolution of sodium density profile and LGS image under-sampling.
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