The Adaptive Optics Summer School Laboratory Activities
S. Mark Ammons, Scott Severson, J. D. Armstrong, Ian Crossfield, Tuan, Do, Mike Fitzgerald, David Harrington, Adam Hickenbotham, Jennifer Hunter,, Jess Johnson, Luke Johnson, Kaccie Li, Jessica Lu, Holly Maness, Katie, Morzinski, Andrew Norton, Nicole Putnam, Austin Roorda

TL;DR
The paper describes new laboratory activities developed for the Adaptive Optics Summer School to enhance understanding of AO technologies among graduate students and researchers, covering optical alignment, system design, and scientific applications.
Contribution
Introduction of innovative AO laboratory sessions from 2006-2009 that improve practical understanding and engagement with AO systems for a diverse scientific audience.
Findings
Participants found activities valuable for their careers
Hands-on experience with AO systems was particularly beneficial
Activities effectively integrated inquiry techniques with complex content
Abstract
Adaptive Optics (AO) is a new and rapidly expanding field of instrumentation, yet astronomers, vision scientists, and general AO practitioners are largely unfamiliar with the root technologies crucial to AO systems. The AO Summer School (AOSS), sponsored by the Center for Adaptive Optics, is a week-long course for training graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in the underlying theory, design, and use of AO systems. AOSS participants include astronomers who expect to utilize AO data, vision scientists who will use AO instruments to conduct research, opticians and engineers who design AO systems, and users of high-bandwidth laser communication systems. In this article we describe new AOSS laboratory sessions implemented in 2006-2009 for nearly 250 students. The activity goals include boosting familiarity with AO technologies, reinforcing knowledge of optical alignment…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEngineering Education and Pedagogy · Experimental Learning in Engineering
