Title: Angel lecture 4 Sept 21
1Angel lecture 4Sept 21
- QED view of astronomical optics
- Simple optical systems, interferometry
2Ideal diffraction limited images by QED GMT
same FWHM as 24.4 m filled circle24.4 m Airy
GMT
3Starting point
- Per homework
- star photon detection probability for circular
aperture parabolic telescope - classic Airy diffraction pattern
- FWHM of pattern in focal plane corresponds to
angle l/D on sky HST resolution
4Example of more complex telescope aperture
- Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT)
- Next generation ground telescope
- Being designed by Arizona, Carnegie
Observatories, CfA, MIT, Michigan, Texas - Aperture synthesized from 7 X 8.4 m mirrors
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7How do you get paths across 25 m aperture
accurate enough for diffraction limit?
- Need to control whole surface to fit paraboloid
to accuracy ltlt 1.6 mm wavelength - Steel structure supporting primary segments bends
much more than this in wind gusts - Hard to servo position of 18 ton segments to 100
nm - SOLUTION
- Use fact that paths reflect also off secondary
mirror before coming to focus - Make correction at much smaller, more agile
secondary - Secondary segments are 1.1 m diameter
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9View of secondary from infrared instrument
- Secondary segments seen against sky
- In thermal infrared, beams or baffles glow much
brighter than sky - Need to eliminat background photons from sky that
just add noise at detector.
10Exoplanet detection with GMT
- take advantage of very high angular resolution
- l/D 0.014 arcsec at l1.65 mm
- For reference, 1 AU at 10 pc 0.100 arcsec
- But how do we get very high contrast?
- Jupiter at 1 AU is 10-8 of sun
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12Deform shape of secondary to change point spread
function (PSF)
- Waves across secondary will place added light at
spot in halo - Translation of wave across aperture changes phase
of spot - Match spot amplitude and angle to null local psf
pixel - superpose waves to match in detail each pixel of
the diffraction pattern
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15Speckles induced in a 1.6 micron real star image
from the MMT AO system
3 wave ripple induced by deformable secondary
across 6.5 m diameter Amplitude about 200
nm Little vectors biased in one direction, dont
curl up
16suppression of 180 degrees of diffraction pattern
with shape deformable secondary (Codona)
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19Atmospheric wavefront aberration must also be
corrected dynamical deformation of secondary-
adaptive optics
- Thermal variations in atmosphere cause
differences in path length across primary mirror - Refractive index of STP air n 1.0003
- Pressure constant, so from gas law
dT/Tdr/r - dn/n n so dn10-6/K
- Representative atmospheric case
- boundary between air streams with DT 1 K and 1 m
rms amplitude roughness on 1 m scale - Yields 1mm rms path length variations on 1 m
scale - Actual boundary has variations on all scales
given by Kolmogorov turbulence amplitude as
x5/6
20path variations taken up by deforming shape of
secondary
- Done at MMT, LBT and GMT
- Typical turbulence is fixed screen moving by at
wind speed like an invisible cloud carried by
wind - Speed 20 km/sec
- For 1 m turbulence time scale is 50 msec
- In practice servo needs 1 msec updates to follow
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23How can we actually know the arrow direction for
a detected photon?
- We cant
- But we can if the aberration remains fixed, while
a number of photons are detected - Method of interferometry
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25Numerical models of suppression with deformable
secondary