Abstract

Vibrations are a key source of image degradation in ground-based instrumentation, especially for high-contrast imaging instruments. Vibrations reduce the quality of the correction provided by the adaptive optics system, blurring the science image and reducing the sensitivity of most science modules. We studied vibrations using the Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics (SCExAO) instrument at the Subaru Telescope as it is the most vibration sensitive system installed on the telescope. We observed vibrations for all targets, usually at low frequency, below 10 Hz. Using accelerometers on the telescope, we confirmed that these vibrations were introduced by the telescope itself, and not the instrument. It was determined that they were related to the pitch of the encoders of the telescope drive system, both in altitude and azimuth, with frequencies evolving proportionally to the rotational speed of the telescope. Another strong vibration was found in the altitude axis of the telescope, around the time of transit of the target, when the altitude rotation speed is below 0.12 arcsec/s. These vibrations are amplified by the 10-Hz control loop of the telescope, especially in a region between 4 and 6 Hz. In this work, we demonstrate an accurate characterization of the frequencies of the telescope vibrations using only the coordinates -right ascension and declination- of the target, and provide a means by which we can predict them for any telescope pointing. This will be a powerful tool that can be used by more advanced wavefront control algorithms, especially predictive control, that uses informations about the disturbance to calculate the best correction.

Highlights

  • The strongest pointing disturbances faced by astronomical telescopes are atmospheric turbulence and mechanical vibrations

  • Telescope vibrations are the strongest disturbance that high-contrast imaging instruments, such as Subaru coronagraphic extreme adaptive optics (SCExAO) face

  • Despite the fact that they tend to be at low frequencies due to the mass of the telescope, their amplitudes make them hard to correct, even when the control loop runs at a few kHz

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Summary

Introduction

The strongest pointing disturbances faced by astronomical telescopes are atmospheric turbulence and mechanical vibrations. To better understand the origins of these vibrations, the same accelerometers were reinstalled in 2015 to compare the telescope vibrations with the measurements taken from various WFSs and imagers onboard SCExAO. We focus on the analysis of the vibrations measured with SCExAO, and compare them with the accelerometer data. Methods to correct these vibrations will be presented in a separate publication.

Impact of Vibrations
Effect of Vibrations on Interferometric Data in Visible
Wavefront Sensing Metrology
Accelerometers on the Telescope
Converting Equatorial Coordinates to Horizontal Coordinates
Rotational Speed of the Telescope During Tracking
Correlation Between Accelerometer and Wavefront Sensor Measurements
Symmetries Around 5 Hz
Transit Vibration
Low transit altitude
Transiting around zenith
Findings
Conclusion

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