Adaptive Optics in Astronomy
DOI: 10.1063/1.881406
Optical observations by ground‐based astronomers have long been limited by the distorting effects of the Earth’s atmosphere. Primary mirrors have been polished to exquisite accuracy for telescopes with apertures as large as 10 meters, but at optical wavelengths these can deliver an angular resolution typically no better than that of a 25‐cm telescope, as atmospheric turbulence deforms the image on a millisecond time scale. One (highly expensive) approach to overcome this problem has been to loft instruments such as the Hubble Space Telescope above the atmosphere. Another approach, pursued by instrument builders in the astronomy community and their counterparts in the military, has been to design electro‐optical systems that measure and undo the effects of clear‐air turbulence in real time. (See figure 1.) A number of such adaptive optic devices have already been built and operated on large ground‐based telescopes, delivering near‐diffraction‐limited performance at infrared and visible wavelengths. With the first significant astronomical images beginning to appear from these adaptive optics systems (see the cover of this issue), the level of interest in this work is rising very rapidly in the astronomy community.
References
1. H. W. Babcock, Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac. 65, 229 (1953).https://doi.org/PASPAU
2. V. P. Linnik, Opt. Spektrosk. (USSR) 3, 401 (1957);
English translation in F. Merkle, ed., Active and Adaptive Optics, European Southern Observatory Conf. and Wksp Proc. 48, European Southern Observatory, Garching bei Munchen, Germany (1994), p. 535.3. J. W. Hardy, Sci. Am., June 1994, p. 60.
4. J. M. Beckers, Annu. Rev. Astron. Astrophys. 31, 13 (1993).https://doi.org/ARAAAJ
5. D. L. Fried, J. Opt. Soc. Am. 56, 1372 (1966).https://doi.org/JOSAAH
6. N. J. Woolf, Annu. Rev. Astron. Astrophys. 20, 367 (1982).https://doi.org/ARAAAJ
7. N. J. Woolf, J. R. P. Angel, in Optical and Infrared Telescopes for the 1980s, A Hewitt, ed., Kitt Peak Natl. Observatory, Tucson, Ariz. (1980), p. 1062.
8. J. M. Beckers, F. J. Roddier, P. R. Eisenhardt, L. E. Goad, K.‐L. Shu, Proc. SPIE 628, 290 (1986).https://doi.org/PSISDG
9. R. Foy, A. Labeyrie, Astron. Astrophys. 152, L29 (1985).https://doi.org/AAEJAF
10. C. A. Primmerman, D. V. Murphy, D. A. Page, B. G. Zollars, H. T. Barclay, Nature 353, 141 (1991). https://doi.org/NATUAS
R. Q. Fugate, D. L. Fried, G. A. Ameer, B. R. Boeke, S. L. Browne, P. H. Roberts, R. E. Ruane, G. A. Tyler, L. M. Wopat, Nature 353, 144 (1991).https://doi.org/NATUAS11. G. Rousset, J. C. Fontanella, P. Kern, P. Gigan, F. Rigaut, P. Lena, C. Boyer, P. Jagourel, J. P. Gaffard, F. Merkle, Astron. Astrophys. 230, L29 (1990).https://doi.org/AAEJAF
12. L. A. Thompson, C. S. Gardner, Nature 328, 229 (1987).https://doi.org/NATUAS
13. C. S. Gardner, B. M. Welsh, L. A. Thompson, Proc. IEEE 78, 1721 (1990).https://doi.org/IEEPAD
14. R. K. Tyson, OE Reports, “SPIE Int. Tech. Working Group on Adaptive Optics,” SPIE, Bellingham, Wash. (January 1994).
15. F. Roddier, C. Roddier, J. E. Graves, M. J. Northcott, “Adaptive Optics Imaging of Proto‐Planetary Nebulae: Frosty Leo and the Red Rectangle,” to appear in Astrophys. J.
16. This issue is discussed in several papers, including M. Tallon, R. Foy, Astron. Astrophys. 235, 549 (1990); https://doi.org/AAEJAF
D. C. Johnston, B. M. Welsh, J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 11, 394 (1994).https://doi.org/JOAOD617. J. C. Geary, G. A. Luppino, Proc. SPIE 2201, 588 (1994).https://doi.org/PSISDG
18. B. M. Levine, J. R. Janesick, J. C. Shelton, Proc. SPIE 2201, 596 (1994). https://doi.org/PSISDG
C. D. McKay, J. E. Baldwin, J. Rogers, G. Cox, Proc. SPIE 2201, 613 (1994).https://doi.org/PSISDG19. H. T. Barclay, P. H. Malyak, W. H. McGonagle, R. K. Reich, G. S. Rowe, J. C. Twichell, in Laser Guide Star Adaptive Optics Workshop, R. Q. Fugate, ed., Phillips Lab., Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico (1992), p. 719.
20. F. Roddier, Appl. Opt. 27, 1223 (1988).https://doi.org/APOPAI
21. D. G. Sandler, T. K. Barrett, D. A. Palmer, R. Q. Fugate, W. J. Wild, Nature 351, 300 (1991).https://doi.org/NATUAS
22. R. Q. Fugate et al., J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 11, 310 (1994). https://doi.org/JOAOD6
L. A. Thompson, R. M. Castle, Opt. Lett. 17, 1485 (1992).https://doi.org/OPLEDP23. T. Jeys, Lincoln Lab. J. 4, 133 (1991). https://doi.org/LLJOEJ
H. W. Friedman, G. Erbert, T. Kuklo, J. T. Salmon, D. Smauley, G. R. Thompson, J. N. Wong, Proc. SPIE 2201, 352 (1994).https://doi.org/PSISDG24. L. A. Thompson, Proc. SPIE 2201, 1074 (1994).https://doi.org/PSISDG
More about the Authors
Laird A. Thompson. University of Illinois, Urbana‐Champaign.