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    On-sky verification of Fast and Furious focal-plane wavefront sensing: Moving forward toward controlling the island effect at Subaru/SCExAO

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    Author
    Bos, S. P.
    Vievard, S.
    Wilby, M. J.
    Snik, F.
    Lozi, J.
    Guyon, O. cc
    Norris, B. R. M.
    Jovanovic, N.
    Martinache, F.
    Sauvage, J-F
    Keller, C. U.
    Show allShow less
    Affiliation
    Univ Arizona, Steward Observ
    Univ Arizona, Coll Opt Sci
    Issue Date
    2020-07
    Keywords
    instrumentation: adaptive optics
    instrumentation: high angular resolution
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Publisher
    EDP SCIENCES S A
    Citation
    Bos, S. P., Vievard, S., Wilby, M. J., Snik, F., Lozi, J., Guyon, O., ... & Keller, C. U. (2020). On-sky verification of Fast and Furious focal-plane wavefront sensing: Moving forward toward controlling the island effect at Subaru/SCExAO. arXiv preprint arXiv:2005.12097.
    Journal
    ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
    Rights
    Copyright © ESO 2020.
    Collection Information
    This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.
    Abstract
    Context. High-contrast imaging (HCI) observations of exoplanets can be limited by the island effect (IE). The IE occurs when the main wavefront sensor (WFS) cannot measure sharp phase discontinuities across the telescope's secondary mirror support structures (also known as spiders). On the current generation of telescopes, the IE becomes a severe problem when the ground wind speed is below a few meters per second. During these conditions, the air that is in close contact with the spiders cools down and is not blown away. This can create a sharp optical path length difference between light passing on opposite sides of the spiders. Such an IE aberration is not measured by the WFS and is therefore left uncorrected. This is referred to as the low-wind effect (LWE). The LWE severely distorts the point spread function (PSF), significantly lowering the Strehl ratio and degrading the contrast. Aims. In this article, we aim to show that the focal-plane wavefront sensing (FPWFS) algorithm, Fast and Furious (F&F), can be used to measure and correct the IE/LWE. The F&F algorithm is a sequential phase diversity algorithm and a software-only solution to FPWFS that only requires access to images of non-coronagraphic PSFs and control of the deformable mirror. Methods. We deployed the algorithm on the SCExAO HCI instrument at the Subaru Telescope using the internal near-infrared camera in H-band. We tested with the internal source to verify that F&F can correct a wide variety of LWE phase screens. Subsequently, F&F was deployed on-sky to test its performance with the full end-to-end system and atmospheric turbulence. The performance of the algorithm was evaluated by two metrics based on the PSF quality: (1) the Strehl ratio approximation (SRA), and (2) variance of the normalized first Airy ring (VAR). The VAR measures the distortion of the first Airy ring, and is used to quantify PSF improvements that do not or barely affect the PSF core (e.g., during challenging atmospheric conditions). Results. The internal source results show that F&F can correct a wide range of LWE phase screens. Random LWE phase screens with a peak-to-valley wavefront error between 0.4 mu m and 2 mu m were all corrected to a SRA > 90% and an VAR less than or similar to 0.05. Furthermore, the on-sky results show that F&F is able to improve the PSF quality during very challenging atmospheric conditions (1.3-1.4 '' seeing at 500 nm). Closed-loop tests show that F&F is able to improve the VAR from 0.27-0.03 and therefore significantly improve the symmetry of the PSF. Simultaneous observations of the PSF in the optical (lambda=750 nm, Delta lambda=50 nm) show that during these tests we were correcting aberrations common to the optical and NIR paths within SCExAO. We could not conclusively determine if we were correcting the LWE and/or (quasi-)static aberrations upstream of SCExAO. Conclusions. The F&F algorithm is a promising focal-plane wavefront sensing technique that has now been successfully tested on-sky. Going forward, the algorithm is suitable for incorporation into observing modes, which will enable PSFs of higher quality and stability during science observations.
    Note
    Immediate access
    ISSN
    0004-6361
    EISSN
    1432-0746
    DOI
    10.1051/0004-6361/202037910
    Version
    Final published version
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1051/0004-6361/202037910
    Scopus Count
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    UA Faculty Publications

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