Bibcode
Lüke, J. P.; Montilla, I.; Rodríguez-Ramos, L. F.; López, M.; Femenía, B.; Trujillo-Sevilla, J.; Marichal-Hernández, J. G.; López, R.; Rodríguez-Ramos, J. M.; Rosa, F.; Puga, M.; Fernández-Valdivia, J. J.
Referencia bibliográfica
Three-Dimensional Imaging, Visualization, and Display 2012. Edited by Javidi, Bahram; Son, Jung-Young. Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 8384, pp. 83840D-83840D-9 (2012).
Fecha de publicación:
5
2012
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
Plenoptic cameras have been developed the last years as a passive method
for 3d scanning, allowing focal stack capture from a single shot. But
data recorded by this kind of sensors can also be used to extract the
wavefront phases associated to the atmospheric turbulence in an
astronomical observation. The terrestrial atmosphere degrades the
telescope images due to the diffraction index changes associated to the
turbulence. Na artificial Laser Guide Stars (Na-LGS, 90km high) must be
used to obtain the reference wavefront phase and the Optical Transfer
Function of the system, but they are affected by defocus because of the
finite distance to the telescope. Using the telescope as a plenoptic
camera allows us to correct the defocus and to recover the wavefront
phase tomographically, taking advantage of the two principal
characteristics of the plenoptic sensors at the same time: 3D scanning
and wavefront sensing. Then, the plenoptic sensors can be studied and
used as an alternative wavefront sensor for Adaptive Optics,
particularly relevant when Extremely Large Telescopes projects are being
undertaken. In this paper, we will present the first observational
wavefront phases extracted from real astronomical observations, using
punctual and extended objects, and we show that the restored wavefronts
match the Kolmogorov atmospheric turbulence.