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Status of the PALM-3000 high-order adaptive optics system

Authors :
Ellerbroek, Brent L.
Hart, Michael
Hubin, Norbert
Wizinowich, Peter L.
Bouchez, Antonin H.
Dekany, Richard G.
Roberts, Jennifer E.
Angione, John R.
Baranec, Christoph
Bui, Khanh
Burruss, Rick S.
Croner, Ernest E.
Guiwits, Stephen R.
Hale, David D. S.
Henning, John R.
Palmer, Dean
Shelton, J. Chris
Troy, Mitchell
Truong, Tuan N.
Wallace, J. Kent
Zolkower, Jeffry
Ellerbroek, Brent L.
Hart, Michael
Hubin, Norbert
Wizinowich, Peter L.
Bouchez, Antonin H.
Dekany, Richard G.
Roberts, Jennifer E.
Angione, John R.
Baranec, Christoph
Bui, Khanh
Burruss, Rick S.
Croner, Ernest E.
Guiwits, Stephen R.
Hale, David D. S.
Henning, John R.
Palmer, Dean
Shelton, J. Chris
Troy, Mitchell
Truong, Tuan N.
Wallace, J. Kent
Zolkower, Jeffry
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

The PALM-3000 upgrade to the Palomar Adaptive Optics system will deliver extreme adaptive optics correction to a suite of three infrared and visible instruments on the 5.1 meter Hale telescope. PALM-3000 uses a 3388-actuator tweeter and a 241-actuator woofer deformable mirror, a wavefront sensor with selectable pupil sampling, and an innovative wavefront control computer based on a cluster of 17 graphics processing units to correct wavefront aberrations at scales as fine as 8.1 cm at the telescope pupil using natural guide stars. Many components of the system, including the science instruments and a post-coronagraphic calibration wavefront sensor, have already been commissioned on the sky. Results from a laboratory testbed used to characterize the remaining new components and verify all interfaces are reported. Deployment to Palomar Observatory is planned August 2010, with first light expected in early 2011.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, Status of the PALM-3000 high-order adaptive optics system, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1017649811
Document Type :
Electronic Resource