CHOUGH:The CANARY-Hosted Upgrade for High-Order Adaptive Optics;

Lead Research Organisation: Durham University
Department Name: Physics

Abstract

Astronomical Adaptive Optics is used to remove some of the effects of the Earth's atmosphere from observations of the sky made with optical telescopes. An example is the twinkling of the stars. Without AO, the sharpness and brightness of ground-based images is severely degraded with respect to what could be achieved by a telescope in space. The next generation of extremely large telescopes will have diameters of over 30m, compared with 8m today. They will not be able to go into space, so they basically require adaptive optics technology in order to fulfil their scientific missions.

Up to now the UK has concentrated, via a key collaboration with France, on the adaptive optics technologies required to correct the images from these large telescopes over a wide range of the sky. This is important, for example, because it will enable many of the earliest and most distant galaxies to be surveyed simultaneously, so their formation can be compared with models, instead of individually. With one night of observing costing over £50000, AO will also ultimately save money as well as time and improve the quality of the data measured.

Instead of moderate quality correction for many targets, we can instead concentrate on a very high degree of correction for one target in order to maximize the quality of the AO-enhanced images. This is called High-Order Adaptive Optics and enables us to study small, bright objects such as stars and their shape and current state. More excitingly, it will also let us look at the regions of space close to these stars where we can see if they have faint companions such as failed stars or brown dwarfs. Even more excitingly, these circumstellar regions can hold discs of dust and gas from which planets form so we need AO to better understand this aspect of astrophysics. HOAO is very difficult because we must apply AO correction both more finely and more quickly than is currently done which is why we focus on only one target.

This project will enable to the UK to participate much more fully in this area of HOAO. It will do so by allowing us to re-use an existing experiment, CANARY, by extending it with a very high resolution deformable mirror, which corrects the starlight, and new measurement cameras to drive this mirror. The mirror is already in our possession, so this project is a low-cost but high-results experiment that will prove this novel type of AO using the William Herschel Telescope on La Palma, Canary Islands. Our project is called CHOUGH, or the Canary High Order UpGrade for High-order adaptive optics and its name comes from a type of crow commonly found on La Palma. The WHT telescope is particularly important as it has a purpose built laboratory to support the testing of new ideas such as CHOUGH, and this means it is possible to show that the ideas in CHOUGH work in real-life, which we call "on sky", instead of just in computer simulations.

Planned Impact

The CHOUGH project, the "CANARY High-Order UpGrade for High Order Adaptive Optics", will build UK expertise in high-order adaptive optics. There are several research groups in Europe and the UK who are active in this field of AO research, and as a test-bed that in turn utilizes the CANARY AO test-bed, CHOUGH will be open to these collaborators, which include our existing CANARY partners.

Beyond the stated objectives of producing an accurately characterized high-order AO corrected PSF which accesses the diffraction limit of the WHT telescope at visible wavelengths, CHOUGH will also allow the testing of existing and new concepts in a real telescope environment.

Developing the theme of accurately characterized PSF, we will promote links to the astronomical community through partnerships with UK universities to utilize the specialized contrast that CHOUGH delivers. For scientific exploitation, and where appropriate, we will consider and encourage the provision of externally provided instrumentation.

The wider contributions of CHOUGH to knowledge transfer to industry or academia include: real-time control systems which will operate with COTS hardware yet deliver extremely fast loop rates; split mode control of deformable mirrors, to utilize the existing CANARY DM in the most effective manner and that would be applicable for uses such as furnace inspection or free-space optical communications; and precision high-resolution wavefront sensing using a novel wavefront-sensor, which will be advantageous to optical coherence microscopy and ophthalmic imaging.

By disseminating results and inviting collaborations through well-established routes we shall forge the relevant partnerships. The PI will directly engage with an extensive network of contacts to enable effective knowledge transfers and the collaborations. Using these proven routes for engagement will cement the academic results anticipated to be delivered by CHOUGH.
 
Description The system was commissioned on-sky on the William Herschel Telescope. The system is used to support further high order adaptive optics research.

A novel form of wavefront sensor for high order adaptive optics calibration was developed during the project. We believe this may have advantages over some existing systems and we are investigating its properties further.
Exploitation Route The novel wavefront sensor (the CAWS) may support other applications in aligning very high order adaptive optical correction systems. The characterisation project (including on-sky testing) is now well-progressed.
Sectors Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software)

Environment

Healthcare

 
Description EU Horizon 2020 program under the FETHPC-1 topic of the FET-Proactive call for 3 years from 1-October-2015.
Amount £689,197 (GBP)
Funding ID 671662 
Organisation European Commission 
Department Horizon 2020
Sector Public
Country European Union (EU)
Start 09/2015 
End 09/2018
 
Description European Space Agency TRP
Amount £283,554 (GBP)
Funding ID TEC-MMO/2014/127 
Organisation ESA - ESTEC 
Sector Public
Country Netherlands
Start 03/2015 
End 05/2018