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Opt Express ; 28(25): 37721-37733, 2020 Dec 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33379601

RESUMO

Strong turbulence conditions create amplitude aberrations through the effects of near-field diffraction. When integrated over long optical path lengths, amplitude aberrations (seen as scintillation) can nullify local areas in the recorded image of a coherent beam, complicating the wavefront reconstruction process. To estimate phase aberrations experienced by a telescope beam control system in the presence of strong turbulence, the wavefront sensor (WFS) of an adaptive optics must be robust to scintillation. We have designed and built a WFS, which we refer to as a "Fresnel sensor," that uses near-field diffraction to measure phase errors under moderate to strong turbulent conditions. Systematic studies of its sensitivity were performed with laboratory experiments using a point source beacon. The results were then compared to a Shack-Hartmann WFS (SHWFS). When the SHWFS experiences irradiance fade in the presence of moderate turbulence, the Fresnel WFS continues to routinely extract phase information. For a scintillation index of S = 0.55, we show that the Fresnel WFS offers a factor of 9 × gain in sensitivity over the SHWFS. We find that the Fresnel WFS is capable of operating with extremely low light levels, corresponding to a signal-to-noise ratio of only SNR≈2-3 per pixel. Such a device is well-suited for coherent beam propagation, laser communications, remote sensing, and applications involving long optical path-lengths, site-lines along the horizon, and faint signals.

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