Abstract

We present a fast and reconfigurable architecture for Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensing implemented on FPGA devices using a stream-based center of gravity to measure the spot displacements. By calculating the center of gravity around each incoming pixel with an optimal window matching the spot size, the common trade-off between noise and bias errors and dynamic range due to window size existing in conventional center of gravity methods is avoided. In addition, the accuracy of centroid estimation is not compromised when the spot moves to or even crosses the sub-aperture boundary, leading to an increased dynamic range. The calculation of the centroid begins while the pixel values are read from an image sensor and further computation such as slope and partial wavefront reconstruction follows immediately as the sub-aperture centroids are ready. The result is a real-time wavefront sensing system with very low latency and high measurement accuracy feasible for targeting on low-cost FPGA devices. This architecture provides a promising solution which can cope with multiple target objects and work in moderate scintillation.

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