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NAOMI: a new adaptive optics module for interferometry

Authors :
Enrico Marchetti
Andrew Rakich
Christian Schmid
Javier Reyes
Jean-Philippe Berger
Miska Le Louarn
J. Quentin
Than Phan Duc
Jerome Paufique
Christophe Dupuy
Luca Pasquini
Norbert Hubin
Stewart McLay
B. Delabre
Reinhold J. Dorn
R. Ridings
Luigi Andolfato
Marcos Suarez Valles
Emmanuel Aller-Carpentier
Paul Lilley
Enrico Fedrigo
Francoise Delplancke-Stroebele
Philippe B. Gitton
Julien Woillez
Paul Jolley
Source :
SPIE Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
SPIE, 2014.

Abstract

The New Adaptive Optics Module for Interferometry (NAOMI)1 is the future low order adaptive optics system to be developed for and installed at the ESO 1.8 m Auxiliary Telescopes (ATs). The four ATs2 are designed for interferometry which they are essentially dedicated for. Currently the AT’s are equipped with a fast, visible tip-tilt sensor called STRAP3 (System for Tip/tilt Removal with Avalanche Photodiodes), and the corrections are applied through a tip-tilt mirror. The goal is to equip all four ATs with a low-order Shack-Hartmann system operating in the visible for the VLTI dual feed light beams in place of the current tip-tilt correction. Because of the limited size of the ATs (1.8m diameter), a low-order system will be sufficient. The goal is to concentrate the energy into a coherent core and to make the encircled energy (into the single mode fibers) stable and less dependent on the atmospheric conditions in order to increase the sensitivity of the interferometric instruments. The system will use the ESO real time computer platform Sparta-light as the baseline. This paper presents the preliminary design concept and outlines the benefits to current and future VLTI instruments.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........379a3326b282c090ae00d458b759e625