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Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2018

Low wind effect on VLT/SPHERE: impact, mitigation strategy, and results

Julien Milli
Julien Girard
Dimitri Mawet
Alexander Telle
  • Fonction : Auteur
Arthur Vigan
Mamadou N'Diaye

Résumé

The low wind effect is a phenomenon disturbing the phase of the wavefront in the pupil of a large telescope obstructed by spiders, in the absence of wind. It can be explained by the radiative cooling of the spiders, creating air temperature inhomogeneities across the pupil. Because it is unseen by traditional adaptive optics (AO) systems, thus uncorrected, it significantly degrades the quality of AO-corrected images. We provide a statistical analysis of the strength of this effect as seen by VLT/SPHERE after 4 years of operations. We analyse its dependence upon the wind and temperature conditions. We describe the mitigation strategy implemented in 2017: a specific coating with low thermal emissivity in the mid-infrared was applied on the spiders of Unit Telescope 3. We quantify the improvement in terms of image quality, contrast and wave front error using both focal plane images and measured phase maps.

Dates et versions

hal-02118141 , version 1 (02-05-2019)

Identifiants

Citer

Julien Milli, Markus Kasper, Pierre Bourget, Cyril Pannetier, David Mouillet, et al.. Low wind effect on VLT/SPHERE: impact, mitigation strategy, and results. Adaptive Optics Systems VI, Jun 2018, Austin, United States. pp.83, ⟨10.1117/12.2311499⟩. ⟨hal-02118141⟩
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