Atmospheric seeing When light from a star or another astronomical object enters the Earth's atmosphere, atmospheric
turbulence (introduced, for example, by different temperature layers and different wind speeds interacting) can distort and move the image in various ways. Visual images produced by any telescope larger than approximately are blurred by these distortions.
Wavefront sensing and correction An adaptive optics system tries to correct these
distortions, using a
wavefront sensor which takes some of the astronomical light, a
deformable mirror that lies in the optical path, and a computer that receives input from the detector. The wavefront sensor measures the distortions the atmosphere has introduced on the timescale of a few
milliseconds; the computer calculates the optimal mirror shape to correct the
distortions and the surface of the
deformable mirror is reshaped accordingly. For example, an telescope (like the
VLT or
Keck) can produce AO-corrected images with an
angular resolution of 30–60
milliarcsecond (mas)
resolution at
infrared wavelengths, while the resolution without correction is of the order of 1
arcsecond. In order to perform adaptive optics correction, the shape of the incoming wavefronts must be measured as a function of position in the telescope aperture plane. Typically the circular telescope aperture is split up into an array of
pixels in a wavefront sensor, either using an array of small
lenslets (a
Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensor), or using a curvature or pyramid sensor which operates on images of the telescope aperture. The mean wavefront perturbation in each pixel is calculated. This pixelated map of the wavefronts is fed into the deformable mirror and used to correct the wavefront errors introduced by the atmosphere. It is not necessary for the shape or size of the
astronomical object to be known – even
Solar System objects which are not point-like can be used in a Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensor, and time-varying structure on the surface of the
Sun is commonly used for adaptive optics at solar telescopes. The deformable mirror corrects incoming light so that the images appear sharp.
Using guide stars Natural guide stars Because a science target is often too faint to be used as a reference star for measuring the shape of the optical wavefronts, a nearby brighter
guide star can be used instead. The light from the science target has passed through approximately the same atmospheric turbulence as the reference star's light and so its image is also corrected, although generally to a lower accuracy. The necessity of a reference star means that an adaptive optics system cannot work everywhere on the sky, but only where a guide star of sufficient
luminosity (for current systems, about
magnitude 12–15) can be found very near to the object of the observation. This severely limits the application of the technique for astronomical observations. Another major limitation is the small field of view over which the adaptive optics correction is good. As the angular distance from the guide star increases, the image quality degrades. A technique known as "multiconjugate adaptive optics" uses several deformable mirrors to achieve a greater field of view.
Artificial guide stars . This laser beam can then be used as a guide star for the AO. An alternative is the use of a
laser beam to generate a reference light source (a
laser guide star, LGS) in the atmosphere. There are two kinds of LGSs:
Rayleigh guide stars and
sodium guide stars. Rayleigh guide stars work by propagating a
laser, usually at near
ultraviolet wavelengths, and detecting the backscatter from air at altitudes between . Sodium guide stars use laser light at 589
nm to resonantly excite sodium atoms higher in the
mesosphere and
thermosphere, which then appear to "glow". The LGS can then be used as a wavefront
reference in the same way as a natural guide star – except that (much fainter) natural reference stars are still required for image position (tip/tilt) information. The
lasers are often pulsed, with measurement of the
atmosphere being limited to a window occurring a few
microseconds after the pulse has been launched. This allows the system to ignore most scattered light at ground level; only light which has travelled for several microseconds high up into the atmosphere and back is actually detected.} == In retinal imaging ==