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Publicações

Publicações por Carlos Manuel Correia

2019

Characterization of the atmosphere vertical distribution from short-exposures images

Autores
Beltramo-Martin O.; Bharmal N.A.; Correia C.M.; Fusco T.;

Publicação
AO4ELT 2019 - Proceedings 6th Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes

Abstract
We present PEPITO as a new low-cost and low-complexity concept for profiling the vertical distribution of atmospheric turbulence. PEPITO utilizes post facto tip-tilt (TT) corrected short-exposure images to reproduce the anisokinetism effect and then produces the profile estimation using a model-fitting algorithm. We present in this proceedings the methodology we use to estimate the profile and simulation results, that show that PEPITO can reach potentially 1% of accuracy on a 0.5 m telescope by using 5 stars of magnitude mV=15 mag and distributed over a field of 10, arcmin. We present the sensitivity of PEPITO as well as a sky coverage analysis.

2019

In depth analysis of fourier-based wavefront sensors with the adaptive optics testbed LOOPS

Autores
Janin-Potiron P.; Chambouleyron V.; Schatz L.; Fauvarque O.; Bond C.Z.; Muslimov E.; El-Hadi K.; Sauvage J.F.; Dohlen K.; Neichel B.; Correia C.M.; Villard N.; Aïssani S.; Taheri M.; Fusco T.;

Publicação
AO4ELT 2019 - Proceedings 6th Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes

Abstract
The development and study of new, more robust and powerful wavefront sensors plays an important role in the improvement of the wavefront sensing capabilities of adaptive optics systems. The LAM-ONERA On-sky Pyramid Sensor is a R&D bench dedicated to study and characterize these new wavefront sensors. In this paper, we give a glance at the current status of the bench in terms of hardware and at the most recent results obtained using new flavours of Fourier filtering wavefront sensors.

2019

A story of errors and bias: The optimization of the LGS WFS for HARMONI

Autores
Fusco T.; Neichel B.; Correia C.; Blanco L.; Costille A.; Dohlen K.; Rigaut F.; Renaud E.; Bonnefoi A.; Ke Z.; El-Hadi K.; Paufique J.; Oberti S.; Clarke F.; Bryson I.; Thatte N.;

Publicação
AO4ELT 2019 - Proceedings 6th Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes

Abstract
Laser Guide Star [LGS] wave-front sensing is a key element of the Laser Tomographic AO system and mainly drives the final performance of any ground based high resolution instrument. In that framework, HARMONI the first light spectro-imager of the ELT [1,2], will use 6 Laser focused around 90km(@Zenith) with a circular geometry in order to sense, reconstruct and correct for the turbulence volume located above the telescope. LGS wave-front sensing suffers from several well-known limitations [3] which are exacerbated by the giant size of the Extremely Large Telescopes. In that context, the presentation is threefold: (1) we will describe, quantify and analyse the various effects (bias and noise) induced by the LGS WFS in the context of ELT. Among other points, we will focus on the spurious low order signal generated by the spatially and temporally variable sodium layer. (2) we will propose a global design trade-off for the LGS WFS and Tomographic reconstruction process in the HARMONI context. We will show that, under strong technical constraints (especially concerning the detectors characteristics), a mix of opto-mechanic and numerical optimisations will allow to get rid of WFS bias induce by spot elongation without degrading the ultimate system performance (3) beyond HARMONI baseline, we will briefly present alternative strategies (from components, concepts and algorithms point of view) that could solve the LGS spot elongation issues at lower costs and better robustness.

2019

Model-based wavefront reconstruction for the pyramid sensor tested on the LOOPS bench

Autores
Hutterer V.; Janin-Potiron P.; Shatokhina I.; Fauvarque O.; Obereder A.; Raffetseder S.; Chambouleyron V.; Correia C.; Fusco T.; Neichel B.; El-Hadi K.; Bond C.;

Publicação
AO4ELT 2019 - Proceedings 6th Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes

Abstract
Model-based matrix-free wavefront reconstruction algorithms have proven to provide highly accurate results for both Shack-Hartmann and pyramid wavefront sensors in various simulation environments (OCTOPUS, YAO, COMPASS, OOMAO). Previously, test bench as well as on-sky tests were performed with the CuReD for the Shack-Hartmann sensor providing a convincing performance level together with highly reduced computational efforts. The P-CuReD is a method with linear complexity for wavefront reconstruction from pyramid sensor data which employs the CuReD algorithm and a data preprocessing step converting pyramid signals into Shack-Hartmann-like data. Here we present experimental results for the pyramid sensor being controlled with the P-CuReD on the LOOPS test bench of the Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Marseille. Through the example of the P-CuReD a comparison of control using matrix-free Fourier domain based methods to standard interaction-matrix-based approaches is provided.

2019

The iQuad sensor: A new fourier-based wave front sensor derived from the 4 quadrants coronagraph

Autores
Fauvarque O.; Hutterer V.; Janin-Potiron P.; Duboisset J.; Correia C.; Neichel B.; Sauvage J.F.; Fusco T.; Shatokhina I.; Ramlau R.; Chambouleyron V.; Brûlé Y.;

Publicação
AO4ELT 2019 - Proceedings 6th Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes

Abstract
Some coronagraph masks can be turned into wave front sensing masks thanks to minor modification. For instance, one only has to divide by two the depth of the central well to convert the Roddier & Roddier coronograph into the Zernike wave front sensor (WFS). Physically, the opposition of phase in coronagrapy becomes a quadrature phase in wave front sensing. Here, we replicate this idea to the Four Quadrant Phase Mask (FQPM) coronagraph by introducing a sensor that we call the iQuad WFS, generated by a mask which has the same geometrical structure as the FQPM but with a modified differential piston. An optical and mathematical description of this new WFS is firstly provided showing its great elegance and the central role played by the Hilbert transform in its understanding. We then compare its performance criteria with two classical wave front sensors. We finally show the iQuad sensor has major similarities to the Pyramid sensor making it a wonderful theoretical object to improve our understanding of this sensor.

2019

Overview of PSF determination techniques for adaptive-optics assisted ELT instruments

Autores
Wagner R.; Beltramo-Martin O.; Correia C.M.; Fétick R.J.; Ramlau R.; Fusco T.; Neichel B.;

Publicação
AO4ELT 2019 - Proceedings 6th Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes

Abstract
The determination of the optical point spread function (PSF) or a model thereof is one key step in the estimation of key astronomical quantities for most science cases. Yet it has proven quite challenging due to crowding or the total absence of point-sources in the field or variability (time, angle and wavelength). For Adaptive-optics (AO) assisted observations, alternative techniques exist such as PSF reconstruction (PSF-R) which relies on the AO control loop data. Our goal is to provide a standardized nomenclature and categorization of the techniques that use focal-plane data (numerical extraction, parametric model-fitting), recovery from telemetry (reconstruction, analytic or Monte Carlo modeling) or both jointly combined (hybrid, deconvolution) in an attempt to gain insight into the advantages and shortcomings of such techniques. Applicability to AO systems on Giant Segmented Mirror Telescopes (GSMT) is our main motivation.

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