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Wavefront Sensing for the LSST

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The LSST will have three actively controlled mirrors, three lenses and a filter. These optics will have to be set ... Least squares fitting of Zernike modes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Wavefront Sensing for the LSST


1
Wave-front Sensing for the LSST
  • K.L. Baker

2
Outline
  • I. Overview
  • II. Wave-front sensing techniques using the sky
  • Curvature sensing
  • Phase Retrieval
  • Phase Diversity
  • III. Active probing possibilities
  • Shack-Hartmann Sensing
  • Shear Interferometry
  • IV. Wave-front tomography

3
Overview
  • The LSST will have three actively controlled
    mirrors, three lenses and a filter.
  • These optics will have to be set initially and
    the mirrors will have to be continually actuated
    to counteract gravitational and thermal bending
    modes.
  • Wave-front sensing techniques are required to
    sense the aberrations induced by the optics,
    thereby allowing their correction.
  • The FPAs dedicated to wave-front sensing might
    need to be recessed, have a smaller pixel size,
    lower band gap energy than silicon, require
    additional optics or coatings.

4
Curvature Sensing
  • A curvature sensor measures the spatial intensity
    distribution equal distances on either side of
    focus.
  • The difference in the intensity is proportional
    to the Laplacian of the phase.

Transport of Intensity Equation
References FFT - F. Roddier and C. Roddier, J.
Opt. Soc. Am. A. 10, 2277 (1993). Zernike - T.E.
Gureyev and K.A. Nugent, J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 13,
1670 (1996). Alt. Approach - M.A. Van Dam and
R.G. Lane, Appl. Opt. 41, 5497 (2002).
5
Phase Retrieval/Phase Diversity (Measurement in
one plane)
  • Simplest approach would be to use phase retrieval
    in a single plane.
  • Phase retrieval (Gershberg-Saxton)
  • Measure intensity far-field
  • Assume intensity at pupil
  • Guess a phase and iteratively transform between
    the two planes replacing the calculated intensity
    with the known intensity on each iteration
  • Works well at small D/ro
  • Next step is to deconvolve far-field with the
    long term Kolmogorov atmospheric psf
  • Evaluate the effect of undersampling (20x for
    400 nm)
  • Might require wfs pixel recession and additional
    optics to extend f/ and increase sampling

6
Phase Diversity (Measurement in two planes)
  • Phase diversity involves the measurement of the
    intensity in two planes.
  • Typically at focus and a wave out of focus.
  • Could potentially be accomplished by putting an
    additional transparent film on top of a portion
    of the WFS pixels in combination with additional
    optics such as a Wollaston prism.
  • Different phase retrieval/phase diversity
    algorithms
  • Gershberg-Saxton iteration/error reduction
  • Gradient search method
  • Least squares fitting of Zernike modes

Ref C. Carrano et al.,Phase retrieval
techniques for adaptive optics, Proc. SPIE. Vol.
3353, 658 (1998) R.G Paxman et al.,
Evaluation of Phase-Diversity Techniques for
solar-Image Restoration, Astr. Journal
466, 1087 (1996)
7
Action Items for Phase Retrieval/Diversity
  • Deconvolve the psf with the long-term Kolmogorov
    psf and average multiple shots to determine
    telescope aberrations using phase retrieval in a
    single plane.
  • Begin simulations on phase diversity techniques
    using two measurement planes.
  • Investigate performance of different algorithms
    for point sources, extended sources and general
    scenes under different atmospheric turbulence
    levels.
  • Examine undersampling effects on achievable
    performance.

8
Active Probing Possibilities
  • Place fiber laser sources within the spider
    structure supporting the secondary mirror.
  • Light reaching the FPA would be in the near
    field.
  • Would allow the use of Shack-Hartmann sensors,
    shear interferometry or curvature sensors.
    Potentially phase diversity or correlation
    sensors with additional optics.
  • Advantages
  • Avoid most time-dependent atmospheric effects
  • Probe from fixed locations allowing matrix
    inversion to be done outside of control loops
  • Requirements to run concurrently with science
    data collection (First two were discussed to
    reduce atmospheric effects)
  • WFS pixels lower bandgap energy (InGaAs-typically
    larger size 30 microns and non-uniformities)
  • Coatings on lenses and filters pass wavelength
  • Fiber lasers operate beyond Silicon Bandgap
  • Different field points collected separately(SH,SI
    and C).
  • Active probe dominate sky emission and collected
    at a rate of ltlt10 sec

9
Wave-front Tomography via Zernike Decomposition
  • Wave-front data from different field angles
    enables a tomographic reconstruction.
  • Performing Zernike Decomposition at each of the
    axial planes greatly reduces the problem size.
  • BHA where B is an array of optical path
    differences for each ray, H is the array of
    Zernike polynomial values for each ray and A is
    the array of Zernike coefficients describing the
    phase profile at each axial plane.
  • A is determined by inverting the matrix H via
    singular value decomposition.

Tomography geometry
Applied Phase
Reconstructed Phase
Ref George N. Lawrence and Weng W. Chow, Opt.
Lett. 9 267 (1984).
10
Summary
  • We are investigating a number of techniques for
    wave-front sensing on the LSST.
  • This also includes active probing of the
    telescope to avoid atmospheric effects. The
    transmission through the filters will likely
    determine the feasibility of this approach.
  • In the near term we will primarily be looking at
    phase retrieval and phase diversity techniques
    applied to sky images.
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