Paper
28 September 2004 A robotic instrument for measuring high altitude atmospheric turbulence from Dome C, Antarctica
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Abstract
To properly characterize the atmospheric properties of a site for a future large telescope or interferometer, it is insufficient to measure quantities, such as the full-width at half-maximum of a stellar image, that have been integrated over the entire atmosphere. A knowledge of the turbulence distribution as a function of height is necessary, since this affects the ease and degree to which adaptive optics systems can improve the telescope’s resolution. Furthermore, some astronomical measurements, such as narrow-field differential astrometry at microarcsecond precision, depend critically on the amount of turbulence high in the atmosphere (up to 20km). In order to obtain the necessary site-testing data at remote sites such as those on the Antarctic plateau, we have designed a robust and reliable instrument based on an 85 mm refractive telescope, a gimbal-mounted sidereostat mirror, and a Multi-Aperture Scintillation Sensor (MASS). The instrument uses the spatial structure of single-star scintillation to measure vertical turbulence profiles from 0.5 to 20km. The MASS system is designed to operate completely autonomously throughout the Antarctic winter. It also has potential applications at existing observatory sites for quantifying the turbulence characteristics of the atmosphere in real-time.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jon S. Lawrence, Michael C.B. Ashley, Suze Kenyon, John W.V. Storey, Andrei A. Tokovinin, James P. Lloyd, and Mark R. Swain "A robotic instrument for measuring high altitude atmospheric turbulence from Dome C, Antarctica", Proc. SPIE 5489, Ground-based Telescopes, (28 September 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.551017
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Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Domes

Telescopes

Turbulence

Stars

Scintillation

Atmospheric turbulence

CCD cameras

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