Author
Van Gorkom, K.Males, J.R.
Close, L.M.
Lumbres, J.
Hedglen, A.
Long, J.D.
Haffert, S.Y.
Guyon, O.
Kautz, M.
Schatz, L.
Miller, K.
Rodack, A.T.
Knight, J.M.
Morzinski, K.M.
Affiliation
University of Arizona, Steward ObservatoryUniversity of Arizona, College of Optical Sciences
Issue Date
2021
Metadata
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SPIECitation
Van Gorkom, K., Males, J. R., Close, L. M., Lumbres, J., Hedglen, A., Long, J. D., Haffert, S. Y., Guyon, O., Kautz, M., Schatz, L., Miller, K., Rodack, A. T., Knight, J. M., & Morzinski, K. M. (2021). Characterizing deformable mirrors for the MagAO-X instrument. Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems.Rights
Copyright © 2021 SPIE.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
The MagAO-X instrument is an extreme adaptive optics system for high-contrast imaging at visible- and near-infrared wavelengths on the Magellan Clay Telescope. A central component of this system is a 2040-actuator microelectromechanical deformable mirror (DM) from Boston Micromachines Corp. that operates at 3.63 kHz for high-order wavefront control (the tweeter). Two additional DMs from ALPAO perform the low-order (the woofer) and non-common-path science-arm wavefront correction (the NCPC DM). Prior to integration with the instrument, we characterized these devices using a Zygo Verifire Interferometer to measure each DM surface. We present the results of the characterization effort here, demonstrating the ability to drive the tweeter to a flat of 6.9 nm root-mean-square (RMS) surface (and 0.56 nm RMS surface within its control bandwidth), the woofer to 2.2-nm RMS surface, and the NCPC DM to 2.1-nm RMS surface over the MagAO-X beam footprint on each device. Using focus-diversity phase retrieval on the MagAO-X science cameras to estimate the internal instrument wavefront error, we further show that the integrated DMs correct the instrument WFE to 18.7 nm RMS, which, combined with a 11.7% pupil amplitude RMS, produces a Strehl ratio of 0.94 at Hα. © 2021 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE).Note
Immediate accessISSN
2329-4124Version
Final published versionae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1117/1.JATIS.7.3.039001