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This PDF file contains the front matter associated with SPIE
Proceedings Volume 7466, including the Title Page, Copyright
information, Table of Contents, Introduction (if any), and the
Conference Committee listing.
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A novel two-dimensional high-bandwidth Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor was designed, addressing the high temporal
bandwidth of optical aberrations caused by compressible flows. The principle of operation and modifications from an
earlier version of the wavefront sensor are presented and compared to a commercially available wavefront sensor. A
wavefront reconstruction algorithm is derived. The high-temporal resolution and spatial resolution of the sensor is
demonstrated. A two-dimensional, acoustically forced heated jet was used to test the sensor.
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Adaptive optics (AO) systems on airborne platforms must be able to sense fields degraded by strong turbulence
often over long horizontal propagation paths. This paper presents results of simulated hybrid-wavefront-sensor
performance when measuring optical fields due to propagation of a distant point source through Kolmogorov turbulence.
The hybrid-wavefront-sensor simulation combines Shack-Hartmann and self-referencing-interferometer
(SRI) measurements degraded by photon noise and produces higher-resolution wavefront estimates that are less
susceptible to noise than either sensor acting alone and that inherit the SRI's insensitivity to scintillation.
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The use of a laser guidestar (LGS) for the purpose of a beacon in an adaptive-optics (AO) system is prone to
perspective elongation effects on the spots of a Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor. The elongated spots can
vary in size over the subapertures and affect the gradient sensitivity of the sensor. The Air Force Research
Laboratory (AFRL) has developed a LGS model that outputs gradient gains which represent the effects of an
extended beacon on the spots for a Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor. This paper investigates the application
of these gains in an experimental setup in order to both analyze the effects of the variation in those gains due to
spot size elongation and to measure the impact on the performance of an AO system.
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It has long been known that branch points cause degradation in adaptive optic performance. Here, we begin
a study on the aggregate nature of branch points, specifically beginning the process to relate branch points
measured in the pupil to the upstream turbulence that created them. As such, we study not only the wave
as measured in the telescope's pupil, but also the wave in the intervening region between the turbulence layer
and the pupil with this paper's focus on the intervening region. We show that for optical waves propagating in
atmospheric turbulence upstream of the pupil, branch points are created infinitesimally close together in pairs
of opposite polarity. Branch points are shown to be enduring features of the propagating wave and their branch
cuts are shown to evolve smoothly in time. It is postulated that atmospherically created branch point pairs
separate as they propagate, and that they carry both the velocity of, and distance to, the turbulence layer that
created them. Subsequent papers will demonstrate this to be true.
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The Atmospheric Turbulence Simulator used in testing in the Atmospheric Simulation and Adaptive-optic Laboratory
Test-bed at Air Force Research Laboratory, Directed Energy Directorate's Starfire Optical Range is
configured based on three characteristics; Fried's parameter, r0, the Rytov number, σ2χ
, and the Greenwood
Frequency, fG. All three may be estimated from open loop data as a means of verifying the simulated turbulence
conditions for a given test configuration. However, unlike r0 and fG, the Rytov number isn't directly calculated.
Instead the scintillation index is estimated from intensity measurements. At low Rytov values, (< 0.3 - 0.4),
this measurement can approximate the Rytov number, however beyond a Rytov of 0.4 this parameter becomes
saturated. Branch Points begin to appear after the Rytov value exceeds 0.1. In this work the behavior of the
branch point density is examined to determine its viability as another parameter for calibration our turbulence
simulator.
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Recent research has shown that branch points, as they appear in astronomical applications, have a rich collective
behavior, showing, in particular, that branch point pairs have a well-defined, non-stoichastic velocity, and that
once a branch point pairs location is measured, it can be tracked in open-loop adaptive optics operation. The
research presented here uses this new information as a priori knowledge in closed-loop AO. Specifically, an
algorithm was developed that measures branch point location and velocity at time tk and then uses this to
estimate the phase contribution at time tk+n, giving it an effective memory of where branch points appear and
allowing it to determine more accurately between real branch points and noise. The output of the new algorithm
is used as a second input to the DM control law. Results of initial closed-loop AO tests will be presented.
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This paper presents results from an adaptive optics experiment in which an adaptive control loop augments a
classical adaptive optics feedback loop. A membrane deformable mirror is used for wavefront correction, and
a set of frequency-weighted modes based on the actuator geometry are used to define the control channels for
the adaptive controller. In the adaptive optics experiment, the wavefront sensor in the control loop is a three
step phase shifting self-referencing interferometer. The corrected laser beam is imaged by a diagnostic CCD
camera. The effect of atmospheric turbulence is simulated in the experiment by a sequence of wavefronts that
is generated by a WaveTrain adaptive optics model and added to the laser beam by a spatial light modulator.
The experimental results show the improved closed-loop wavefront errors and diagnostic images produced by the
adaptive control loop as compared to the classical adaptive optics loop.
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The conventional adaptive-optics (AO) system configuration consisting of a Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor
using the Fried geometry is prone to an unsensed waffle mode because of an inability to have discrete point
reconstruction of the phase at the actuator positions. Techniques that involve filtering and/or projecting out the
waffle mode in the reconstructor have been shown to be effective at not allowing the unwanted mode to occur,
but come at the cost of also omitting relevant high frequency content from the measured phase. This paper
analyzes a technique of sensing the waffle mode in the deformable mirror commands and applying a spatial filter
to those commands in order to mitigate for the waffle mode. Directly spatially filtering the deformable mirror
commands gives the benefit of maintaining the reconstruction of high frequency phase of interest while having
the ability to alleviate for the waffle pattern when it arises.
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An adaptive optics (AO) system is most effective when there is a known alignment between the wave front
sensor (WFS) and the deformable mirror (DM). Misregistration is the term for the unknown alignment between
the WFS and DM. Misregistration degrades system performance and can make the system unstable. An AO
system uses a reconstruction matrix to transform WFS measurements into DM commands. A standard AO
system uses a model reconstruction matrix that assumes perfect registration between the WFS and DM. The
object of this research is to mitigate the negative effects of misregistration by using offline WFS measurements
to create the reconstruction matrix. To build the reconstruction matrix, each actuator on the DM is poked to
a fixed amount, and then the resulting measurement on the WFS is recorded. Analytic studies of the model
and measured matrices show that the measured matrix yields a more stable AO system. Additional simulations
indicate that applying the measured matrix improves the overall system performance compared to that of the
model reconstruction matrix.
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Adaptive optics applies advanced sensing and control to improve the ability of optical systems to collect images
through a turbulent atmosphere. The results of this research effort demonstrate that the combination of two
recent approaches improves the performance of adaptive optics in directed energy and laser communication
scenarios. The first approach is adaptive control, which offers improved performance over fixed-gain controllers
in the presence of rapidly changing turbulence. The second approach incorporated into the study is a dual-mirror
system. The two mirrors are a high-bandwidth, low-actuator-stroke (tweeter) mirror and a low-bandwidth,
large-actuator-stroke (woofer) mirror. The woofer-tweeter combination allows for better compensation of the
large-variance, high-spatial-frequency phase distortion generated by strong turbulence. Two different adaptive
controllers are presented, one using a relatively simple model reference adaptive system controller and one using a
lattice filter controller. The lattice filter is implemented in two ways. In one implementation the filter operates on
the individual actuators, while in the other it operates on frequency-weighted modes. The modal implementation
reduces the computational burden of the filter. The performance of the different adaptive controllers is compared
to both each other and to a traditional fixed-gain controller. Simulations show that adaptive control of woofertweeter
adaptive optics can increase the mean Strehl ratio by up to 20%. In general, the lattice filter controllers
outperform the model reference adaptive system controller. However, in cases where the lattice filter cannot use
a sufficient number of modes, the model reference adaptive system can outperform the lattice filter.
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In moderate-to-strong scintillation, multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO) appears promising to compensate
for amplitude and phase fluctuations. In this research, a MCAO system is simulated with a segmented deformable
mirror (DM) reshaping the amplitude and the second DM (continuous) flattening the phase after propagation
from the segmented mirror. A Gerchberg-Saxton (GS) type algorithm is used with Fresnel propagation between
DM planes. The effects of varying the phase's apparent resolution on a segmented DM in the pupil plane is
investigated. Results show the mean square error in the reshaped beam decreases as D/ro and Rytov number
increase over the range of conditions tested (ro: 0.11 m - 0.36 m). The field-estimated Strehl ratio drops
precipitously when the number of subapertures is increased beyond about 36 across, using a branch-pointtolerant
unwrapper, due to the presence of branch points. On the second DM, by using the mean of the phase
within each subaperture before back propagating to the first DM plane (inside the GS loop), the Strehl ratio was
improved 6 - 11 percent using 4 - 19 actuators across. Further a novel method of cascading segmented DMs, of
increasingly higher resolution, doing amplitude reshaping followed by a continuous DM to flatten the phase is
explored.
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Effective application of membrane deformable mirrors requires understanding of the operating
characteristics of these devices. Using custom developed hardware and software tools, we were able to
quantify the temporal and spatial response characteristics of a membrane deformable mirror. Temporal
characteristics were analyzed using a frequency sweep stimulus while measuring the DM response on a
feedback photodiode. Spatial characteristics of the DM were analyzed in terms of its ability to reproduce
Zernike polynomials of increasing order using a variety of actuator patterns. We present here both the
techniques for performing these measurements and the results from simulation and the laboratory.
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Iris AO has been developing microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) based deformable mirrors (DM) for a number of
years. This paper presents a review of the basic segmented DM design and shows test results of a 111-actuator, 37-
piston/tip/tilt (PTT) segment DM. A 489-actuator 163-PTT-segment design is described as well as progress towards the
fabrication of the device. A view to the future is shown by describing path-finding research towards 3000-actuator, 1000-
PTT-segment DMs.
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This paper is the 3rd in a series of papers discussing characterization of a Micro-Electrical-Mechanical-System (MEMS)
deformable mirror in adaptive optics. Here we present a comparison between a conventional adaptive optics system
using a Xinetics continuous face sheet deformable mirror with that of segmented MEMS deformable mirror. We
intentionally designed the optical layout to mimic that of a conventional adaptive optics system. We present this initial
optical layout for the MEMS adaptive optics system and discuss problems incurred with implementing such a layout;
also presented is an enhanced optical layout that partially addresses these problems. Closed loop Strehl highlighting the
two systems will be shown for each case as well. Finally the performances of both conventional adaptive optics and the
MEMS adaptive optics system is presented for a range of adaptive optics parameters pertinent to astronomical adaptive
optics leading to a discussion of the possible implication of introducing a MEMS adaptive optics system into the science
community.
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Adaptive Optics is established as essential technology in current and future ground based (extremely) large
telescopes to compensate for atmospheric turbulence. Deformable mirrors for astronomic purposes have a high
number of actuators (> 10k), a relatively large stroke (> 10μm) on a small spacing (< 10mm) and a high control
bandwidth (> 100Hz).
The availability of piezoelectric ceramics as an actuator principle has driven the development of many adaptive
deformable mirrors towards inappropriately stiff displacement actuation. This, while the use of force actuation
supersedes piezos in performance and longevity while being less costly per channel by a factor of 10-20.
This paper presents a model which is independent of the actuator type used for actuation of continuous
facesheet deformable mirrors, to study the design parameters such as: actuator spacing & coupling, influence
function, peak-valley stroke, dynamical behavior: global & local, etc. The model is validated using finite element
simulations and its parameters are used to derive design fundamentals for optimization.
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The wavefront control community relies on fast and accurate subsystems for optical tilt correction. New technology
enables large diameter (172 mm), optically-flat (<32 nm rms surface error), highly accurate, fast (500 Hz) steering
mirrors (FSMs) with very low stabilization errors (50 nrad jitter). Applied Technology Associates (ATA) builds and tests
FSMs using Silicon Carbide lightweight optics on very rigid aluminum mounts. Optical encoders provide position
feedback and the mirror control algorithms are embedded in an FPGA processing architecture with fabric-based doubleprecision
arithmetic capability. To characterize mirror performance, ATA integrated a performance verification system
using an xPC MATLAB-based Track Loop Controller to close a 200 Hz optical loop around the FSM. This paper
describes the mirror and FPGA control that enables a new level of FSM stabilization performance and presents both
modeled and measured performance for the system.
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We introduce a new beam steering concept of the "Risley grating" that consists of independently rotating inline
polarization gratings (PGs). The Risley grating concept replaces the bulky prismatic elements of the Risley prisms
with thin plates containing polarization gratings, and employs their highly polarization-sensitive diffraction. As
rotating two PGs, the output beam tracks within a field-of-regard (FOR), which is determined by the grating
period and their relative orientations. Since PGs are typically patterned in thin liquid crystal layers (a few μm
thick), the system can be implemented with far less thickness and weight. In addition, these thin gratings can
be placed with virtually zero proximity and the beam walk-off becomes negligible. We demonstrate the Risley
grating that performs continuous steering with 62° FOR and 89-92% transmittance at 1550 nm wavelength. The
governing equations for the steering angles of the Risley grating in the direction cosine space are also presented.
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Most non-conventional approaches to image restoration of objects observed over long atmospheric paths
require multiple frames of short exposure images taken with low noise focal plane arrays. Multi-frame
blind deconvolution is such an approach. In most cases the object is assumed to extend only over a single
isoplanatic patch. However, when one is observing scenes over a near horizontal slant path the isoplantic
patch size is small due to extended atmospheric turbulence over the entire slant path, and the scene usually
extends over many isoplanatic patches. In addition base motion jitter in the observing platform introduces
a frame-to-frame linear shift that must be compensated for in order for the multi-frame restoration to be
successful. In this paper we describe a maximum a-posteriori parameter estimation approach to the
simultaneous estimation of the frame-to-frame shifts and non-isoplanatic point spread functions. This
approach can be incorporated into an iterative algorithm. We present a brief derivation of the algorithm as
well as its application to actual image data collected from airborne and ground based platforms.
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In this paper we examine the effect of the addition of uncompensated jitter on adaptive optics performance by
modeling the effects of diffraction, atmospheric turbulence, and jitter as Gaussian beam spread terms. The
anisoplanatic effect of jitter is shown to be a necessary addition to this Gaussian beam spread model. We develop a
simplified method for including the effect of the jitter induced angular anisoplanatism in the Gaussian beam spread
model.
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The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna mission is a planned gravitational wave detector consisting of three spacecraft
in heliocentric orbit. Laser interferometry is used to measure distance fluctuations between test masses aboard each
spacecraft to the picometer level over a 5 million kilometer separation. Laser frequency fluctuations must be suppressed
in order to meet the measurement requirements. Arm-locking, a technique that uses the constellation of spacecraft as a
frequency reference, is a proposed method for stabilizing the laser frequency. We consider the problem of arm-locking
using classical optimal control theory and find that our designs satisfy the LISA requirements.
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