pith. sign in

arxiv: 1901.10701 · v2 · pith:56IYD6TAnew · submitted 2019-01-30 · 🌌 astro-ph.IM

PEPITO: atmospheric Profiling from short-Exposure focalPlane Images in seeing-limiTed mOde

classification 🌌 astro-ph.IM
keywords pepitoprofilingatmosphericimagestelescopeadaptivefieldhigh
0
0 comments X p. Extension
pith:56IYD6TA Add to your LaTeX paper What is a Pith Number?
\usepackage{pith}
\pithnumber{56IYD6TA}

Prints a linked pith:56IYD6TA badge after your title and writes the identifier into PDF metadata. Compiles on arXiv with no extra files. Learn more

read the original abstract

Atmospheric profiling is a requirement for controlling wide-field Adaptive Optics (AO) instruments, analyzing the AO performance with respect to the observing conditions and predicting the Point Spread Function (PSF) spatial variations. We present PEPITO, a new concept for profiling atmospheric turbulence from {\em post~facto} tip-tilt (TT) corrected short-exposure images. PEPITO utilizes the anisokinetism effect in the images between several stars separated from a reference star, and then produces the profile estimation using a model-fitting methodology, by fitting to the long exposure TT-corrected PSF. PEPITO has a high sensitivity to both $C_n^2(h)$ and $L_0(h)$ by relying on the full telescope aperture and a large field of view. It then obtains a high vertical resolution (1\,m-400\,m) configurable by the camera pixel scale, taking advantage of fast statistical convergence (of order of tens of seconds). With only a short exposure-capable large format detector and a numerical complexity independent of the telescope diameter, PEPITO perfectly suits accurate profiling for night optical turbulence site characterization or adaptive optics instruments operations. We demonstrate, in simulation, that the $C_n^2(h)$ and $L_0(h)$ can be estimated to better than 1\% accuracy, from fitted PSFs of magnitude V=11 on a D=0.5\,m telescope with a 10 arcmin field of view.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.