Abstract

Adaptive-optics (AO) systems correct the optical distortions of atmospheric turbulence to improve resolution over long paths. In applications such as remote sensing, object tracking, and directed energy, the AO system's beacon is often an extended beacon reflecting off an optically rough surface. This situation produces speckle noise that can corrupt the wavefront measurements of the AO system, degrading its correction of the turbulence. This work studies the benefits of speckle mitigation via polychromatic illumination. To quantify the benefits over a wide range of conditions, this work uses a numerical wave-optics model with the split-step method for turbulence and the spectral-slicing method for polychromatic light. It assumes an AO system based on a Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor. In addition, it includes realistic values for turbulence strength, turbulence distribution along the path, coherence length, extended-beacon size, and object motion. The results show that polychromatic speckle mitigation significantly improves AO system performance, increasing the Strehl ratio by 180% (from 0.10 to 0.28) in one case.

Full Text
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