Abstract

Abstract For the astronomical adaptive optics systems, the observation condition is always in a regime of low photon flux. We present a method of superimposing subapertures for the Shark–Hartmann wave front sensing with faint objects. This approach significantly improves the signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) of the spot pattern by superimposing adjacent subapertures, thus circumventing the invalid wave front sensing with faint object, enhancing the accuracy of the wave front detection. In addition, we demonstrate that the validity of this approach is not an incidental result under a specific condition, which can be explained theoretically by exploiting the atmospheric turbulence model. Then we validate the approach with simulations and experimental realization under weak-light and bright-light conditions. Results show that the proposed subaperture superposition approach can achieve accurate wave front reconstruction for low S/N or faint object even in cases beyond the ability of conventional methods. It brings out a new idea, besides long exposure and variable sampling, that comes with a tradeoff between temporal sampling frequency and spatial resolution. In addition, this method is also valid for extended objects; we preliminarily validate this method on a 600 mm aperture solar telescope, achieving stable closed-loop control with lower-contrast objects.

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