Paper published in a book (Scientific congresses and symposiums)
Status report on the Large Binocular Telescope's ARGOS ground-layer AO system
Hart, M.; Rabien, S.; Busoni, L. et al.
2011In Astronomical Adaptive Optics Systems and Applications IV
 

Files


Full Text
Hart_2011_SPIE.pdf
Publisher postprint (3.36 MB)
Download

Copyright 2011 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers. One print or electronic copy may be made for personal use only. Systematic reproduction and distribution, duplication of any material in this paper for a fee or for commercial purposes, or modification of the content of the paper are prohibited.


All documents in ORBi are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Abstract :
[en] ARGOS, the laser-guided adaptive optics system for the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT), is now under construction at the telescope. By correcting atmospheric turbulence close to the telescope, the system is designed to deliver high resolution near infrared images over a field of 4 arc minute diameter. Each side of the LBT is being equipped with three Rayleigh laser guide stars derived from six 18 W pulsed green lasers and projected into two triangular constellations matching the size of the corrected field. The returning light is to be detected by wavefront sensors that are range gated within the seeing-limited depth of focus of the telescope. Wavefront correction will be introduced by the telescope's deformable secondary mirrors driven on the basis of the average wavefront errors computed from the respective guide star constellation. Measured atmospheric turbulence profiles from the site lead us to expect that by compensating the ground-layer turbulence, ARGOS will deliver median image quality of about 0.2 arc sec across the JHK bands. This will be exploited by a pair of multi-object near-IR spectrographs, LUCIFER1 and LUCIFER2, with 4 arc minute field already operating on the telescope. In future, ARGOS will also feed two interferometric imaging instruments, the LBT Interferometer operating in the thermal infrared, and LINC-NIRVANA, operating at visible and near infrared wavelengths. Together, these instruments will offer very broad spectral coverage at the diffraction limit of the LBT's combined aperture, 23 m in size.
Disciplines :
Space science, astronomy & astrophysics
Author, co-author :
Hart, M.;  University of Arizona > Steward Observatory
Rabien, S.
Busoni, L.
Barl, L.
Beckmann, U.
Bonaglia, M.
Boose, Y.
Borelli, J. L.
Bluemchen, T.
Carbonaro, L.
Connot, C.
Deysenroth, M.
Davies, R.
Durney, O.
Elberich, M.
Ertl, T.
Esposito, S.
Gaessler, W.
Gasho, V.
Gemperlein, H.
Hubbard, P.
Kanneganti, S.
Kulas, M.
Newman, K.
Noenickx, J.
Orban De Xivry, Gilles  ;  Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik
Peter, D.
Quirrenbach, A.
Rademacher, M.
Schwab, C.
Storm, J.
Vaitheeswaran, V.
Weigelt, G.
Ziegleder, J.
More authors (24 more) Less
Language :
English
Title :
Status report on the Large Binocular Telescope's ARGOS ground-layer AO system
Publication date :
2011
Event name :
SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications
Event date :
2011
Audience :
International
Main work title :
Astronomical Adaptive Optics Systems and Applications IV
Collection name :
Proceedings Volume 8149
Available on ORBi :
since 12 September 2017

Statistics


Number of views
68 (1 by ULiège)
Number of downloads
169 (1 by ULiège)

Scopus citations®
 
11
Scopus citations®
without self-citations
6
OpenCitations
 
1

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBi