Presentation + Paper
10 July 2018 Preliminary on-sky results of the next generation GMT phasing sensor prototype
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Active optics, Guiding, and Wavefront Sensing system (AGWS), currently being designed by SAO, will use J-band dispersed fringe sensors (DFS) to phase the GMT to a fraction of an imaging wavelength. These phasing sensors will use off-axis guide stars to measure phase shifts at each of 12 segment boundaries. The fringes produced at each boundary will be dispersed in the perpendicular direction using an array of high-index doublet prisms. Inter-segment phase shifts will appear as tilts in the dispersed fringes, which can be measured in the Fourier domain. In order to avoid atmospheric blurring of the fringes, we require a J-band detector capable of fast, low-noise readout, which mandates the use of a SAPHIRA e-APD array. We built a DFS prototype that we tested on-sky at the Magellan Clay telescope behind the MagAO adaptive optics system in May 2018.
Conference Presentation
© (2018) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Derek Kopon, Brian McLeod, Antonin Bouchez, Daniel Catropa, Marcos A. van Dam, Danielle Frostig, Jan Kansky, Ken McCracken, William Podgorski, Stuart McMuldroch, Joseph D'Arco, Laird Close, Jared R. Males, and Katie Morzinski "Preliminary on-sky results of the next generation GMT phasing sensor prototype", Proc. SPIE 10703, Adaptive Optics Systems VI, 107030X (10 July 2018); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2314381
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CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Prototyping

Sensors

Prisms

Adaptive optics

Phase shifts

Telescopes

Stars

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