Various Wavefront Sensing and Control Developments on the Santa Cruz Extreme AO Laboratory (SEAL) Testbed
Type
Conference PaperPresentation
Authors
Gerard, Benjamin L.Perez-Soto, Javier
Chambouleyron, Vincent
van Kooten, Maaike A. M.
Dillon, Daren
Cetre, Sylvain
Jensen-Clem, Rebecca
Fu, Qiang

Amata, Hadi

Heidrich, Wolfgang

KAUST Department
Computational Imaging GroupComputer Science Program
Computer, Electrical and Mathematical Science and Engineering (CEMSE) Division
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
Visual Computing Center (VCC)
Date
2022-08-29Permanent link to this record
http://hdl.handle.net/10754/680212
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Ground-based high contrast imaging (HCI) and extreme adaptive optics (AO) technologies have advanced to the point of enabling direct detections of gas-giant exoplanets orbiting beyond the snow lines around nearby young star systems. However, leftover wavefront errors using current HCI and AO technologies, realized as “speckles” in the coronagraphic science image, still limit HCI instrument sensitivities to detecting and characterizing lowermass, closer-in, and/or older/colder exoplanetary systems. Improving the performance of AO wavefront sensors (WFSs) and control techniques is critical to improving such HCI instrument sensitivity. Here we present three different ongoing wavefront sensing and control project developments on the Santa cruz Extreme AO Laboratory (SEAL) testbed: (1) “multi-WFS single congugate AO (SCAO)” using the Fast Atmospheric Self-coherent camera (SCC) Technique (FAST) and a Shack Hartmann WFS, (2) pupil chopping for focal plane wavefront sensing, first with an external amplitude modulator and then with the DM as a phase-only modulator, and (3) a laboratory demonstration of enhanced linearity with the non-modulated bright Pyramid WFS (PWFS) compared to the regular PWFS. All three topics share a common theme of multi-WFS SCAO and/or second stage AO, presenting opportunities and applications to further investigate these techniques in the future.Citation
Gerard, B. L., Perez-Soto, J., Chambouleyron, V., van Kooten, M. A. M., Dillon, D., Cetre, S., Jensen-Clem, R. M., Fu, Q., Amata, H., & Heidrich, W. (2022). Various wavefront sensing and control developments on the Santa Cruz Extreme AO Laboratory (SEAL) testbed. Adaptive Optics Systems VIII. https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2630519Sponsors
We gratefully acknowledge research support of the University of California Observatories and UCSC’s Lamat NSF REU program for funding this research. This work also benefited from the 2022 Exoplanet Summer Program in the Other Worlds Laboratory (OWL) at the University of California, Santa Cruz, a program funded by the Heising-Simons Foundation. Author B. Gerard thanks the 2018 SCExAO team for hosting discussions that led to the pupil chopping concept and the UCSC LAO group, particularly Dominic Sanchez, for discussions that led to the DM-based pupil chopping idea.Publisher
SPIEConference/Event name
SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation, 2022arXiv
2208.03402ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1117/12.2630519