Paper
28 June 2006 Whack-a-speckle: focal plane wavefront sensing in theory and practice with a deformable secondary mirror and 5-micron camera
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Abstract
Long exposures from adaptive optic systems show a diffraction limited core superimposed on a halo of uncorrected light from a science target, and the addition of various long-lived speckles that arise from uncorrected aberrations in the telescope system. The presence of these speckles limit the detection of extra-solar planets at a few diffraction widths from the primary source. Focal plane wavefront sensing uses the deformable secondary mirror of the MMT adaptive optics system to systematically remove the presence of long-lived speckles in a high-contrast image, and also test for the incoherent source that represents a separate astronomical target nearby. We use the Clio 5 micron camera (with its coronagraphic capabilities) to modulate long lived speckles and present initial on-sky results of this technique.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Matthew A. Kenworthy, Philip M. Hinz, J. Roger P. Angel, Ari N. Heinze, and Suresh Sivanandam "Whack-a-speckle: focal plane wavefront sensing in theory and practice with a deformable secondary mirror and 5-micron camera", Proc. SPIE 6272, Advances in Adaptive Optics II, 62723B (28 June 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.672577
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Cited by 7 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Adaptive optics

Planets

Cameras

Deformable mirrors

Mirrors

Diffraction

Imaging systems

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