MAVIS adaptive optics module optical design

The MCAO Assisted Visible Imager and Spectrograph (MAVIS), is a new instrument for ESO’s Very Large Telescope. The instrument will be installed at the Nasmyth focus of the UT4 telescope and is comprised of an imager and a spectrograph which will take advantage of the unprecedented angular resolution and sky coverage provided by LGS assisted MCAO correction at visible wavelengths. The Adaptive Optics Module (AOM) is the core engine of MAVIS, devoted to multi-conjugate wavefront sensing and correction, and designed to deliver a 30×30 arcsec2 corrected field of view to the scientific instruments. In this paper we focus on the optical design of the AOM, which has been optimized to perform several tasks including field de-rotation, atmospheric dispersion correction, and adaptive optics closed-loop operations. To maximize sky coverage, the system is designed to deliver a 2 arcmin field of view for the selection of up to 3 NGS for measurement of tip-tilt. The AOM module also includes a multiple LGS WFS for high-order wavefront measurements and two post-focal DMs for wide field turbulence compensation. The proposed design is the result of a trade-off study in which particular care has been devoted to satisfy performance and operational requirements, as well as modularity. We present here a complete description of the selected optical configuration with a summary of the performance analyses.

[1]  R. Muradore,et al.  GALACSI system design and analysis , 2012, Other Conferences.

[2]  Olivier Guyon,et al.  Overview of the SAPHIRA detector for adaptive optics applications , 2018, Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems.

[3]  Eric Stadler,et al.  C-RED One and C-RED2: SWIR high-performance cameras using Saphira e-APD and Snake InGaAs detectors , 2018, OPTO.

[4]  S. Oberti,et al.  Adaptive Optics Facility: control strategy and first on-sky results of the acquisition sequence , 2016, Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation.

[5]  Davide Greggio,et al.  Optical design trade-off study for the AO module of MAVIS , 2019 .

[6]  Hao Zhang,et al.  MAVIS conceptual design , 2020, Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VIII.

[7]  Francois Rigaut,et al.  MAVIS: system modelling and performance prediction , 2020, Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation.

[8]  Valentina Viotto,et al.  Optical design of a broadband atmospheric dispersion corrector for MAVIS , 2020, Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VIII.

[9]  Roberto Ragazzoni,et al.  MAVIS: science case, imager, and spectrograph , 2020, Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VIII.