The ASM is designed to retrofit the current passive M2. The ASM consists of a 244mm-diameter slumped convex aspherical mirror shell, manipulated by 36 hybrid variable reluctance actuators mounted on a light-weighted backing structure. The mirror shell is manufactured to the required accuracy at reduced cost through slumping by UCSC. The mirror shell is finished to final figure with Magnetorheological Finishing (MRF) by TNO before it was coated.
The ASM was shipped to UH in Hilo in February 2024, where performance was tested in the lab. The IRTF ASM saw ‘first light’ on telescope on the 23rd of April, already achieving stable closed-loop performance that was diffraction limited at the H-band (1.62 microns) with a long-exposure Strehl ratio of 35%-40% in sub-arcsecond seeing during the first night.
This paper will report on the status and first results of the IRTF ASM, including the latest status of the deformable mirror technology at TNO and an outlook to a second generation IRTF ASM with improved dynamic performance and increased actuator count.
Image quality is sensitive to temperature fluctuations on the optical path, even if these are not fully developed turbulence. Thus, it’s crucial to control the thermal environment, be it on a test bench in the laboratory, in instruments (e.g., entrance windows, near electronics), within domes and telescope structures. It is especially crucial where the beam is small (i.e., going through a focus) and the power spectrum of the refractive index can be anything from high frequencies to just tip-tilt.
We have used our optical turbulence sensor AIRFLOW to explore how a DT of a few degrees in the optical path can undo a lot of what an AO system can improve, and we are using our devices to study quantitative ways to minimize the image degradation induced by temperature fluctuations. These may include counterintuitive measures such as fans mixing the air at different temperatures, because mechanical turbulence with no DT doesn’t produce optical turbulence.Adaptive optics (AO) systems deliver high-resolution images that may be ideal for precisely measuring positions of stars (i.e., astrometry) if the system has stable and well-calibrated geometric optical distortions. A calibration unit equipped with a back-illuminated pinhole mask can be utilized to measure instrumental optical distortions. AO systems on the largest ground-based telescopes, such as the W. M. Keck Observatory and the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT), require pinhole positions known to be ∼20 nm to achieve an astrometric precision of 0.001 of a resolution element. In pursuit of that goal, we characterize a photolithographic pinhole mask and explore the systematic errors that result from different experimental setups. We characterized the nonlinear geometric distortion of a simple imaging system using the mask, and we measured 857-nm root mean square of optical distortion with a final residual of 39 nm (equivalent to 20 μ for TMT). We use a sixth-order bivariate Legendre polynomial to model the optical distortion and allow the reference positions of the individual pinholes to vary. The nonlinear deviations in the pinhole pattern with respect to the manufacturing design of a square pattern are 47.2 nm ± 4.5 nm (random) ± 10.8 nm (systematic) over an area of 1788 mm2. These deviations reflect the additional error induced when assuming that the pinhole mask is manufactured perfectly square. We also find that ordered mask distortions are significantly more difficult to characterize than random mask distortions as the ordered distortions can alias into optical camera distortion. Future design simulations for astrometric calibration units should include ordered mask distortions. We conclude that photolithographic pinhole masks are >10 times better than the pinhole masks deployed in first-generation AO systems and are sufficient to meet the distortion calibration requirements for the upcoming 30-m-class telescopes.
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