ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Computationally-efficient wave-front reconstruction techniques for astronomical adaptive optics systems have seen a great development in the past decade. Algorithms developed in the spatial-frequency (Fourier) domain have gathered large attention specially for high-contrast imaging systems. In this paper we present the Wiener filter (resulting in the maximization of the Strehl-ratio) and further develop formulae for the anti-aliasing Wiener filter that optimally takes into account high-order wave-front terms folded in-band during the sensing (i.e. discrete sampling) process. We employ a continuous spatial-frequency representation for the forward measurement operators and derive the Wiener filter when aliasing is explicitly taken into account. We further investigate and compare to classical estimates using least-squares filters the reconstructed wave-front, measurement noise and aliasing propagation coefficients as a function of the system order. Regarding high-contrast systems, we provide achievable performance results as a function of an ensemble of for ward models for the Shack-Hartmann wave-front sensor (using sparse and non-sparse representations) and compute point-spread function raw intensities. We find that for a 32x32 single-conjugated adaptive optics system the aliasing propagation coefficient is roughly 60% of the least-squares filters whereas the noise propagation is around 80%. Contrast improvements of factors of up to 2 are achievable across the field in H-band. For current and next generation high-contrast imagers, despite better aliasing mitigation, anti-aliasing Wiener filtering cannot be used as a stand-alone method and must therefore be used in combination with optical spatial filters deployed before image formation takes actual place.
In tomographic adaptive-optics (AO) systems, errors due to tomographic wave-front reconstruction limit the performance and angular size of the scientific field of view (FoV), where AO correction is effective. We propose a multi time-step tomographic
We build on a long-standing tradition in astronomical adaptive optics (AO) of specifying performance metrics and error budgets using linear systems modeling in the spatial-frequency domain. Our goal is to provide a comprehensive tool for the calculat
Advanced AO systems will likely utilise Pyramid wave-front sensors (PWFS) over the traditional Shack-Hartmann sensor in the quest for increased sensitivity, peak performance and ultimate contrast. Here, we wish to bring knowledge and quantify the PWF
The forthcoming Extremely Large Telescopes all require adaptive optics systems for their successful operation. The real-time control for these systems becomes computationally challenging, in part limited by the memory bandwidths required for wavefron
For ExAO instruments for the Giant Segmented Mirror Telescopes (GSMTs), alternative architectures of WFS are under consideration because there is a tradeoff between detector size, speed, and noise that reduces the performance of GSMT-ExAO wavefront c