Calibration of the island effect: Experimental validation of closed-loop focal plane wavefront control on Subaru/SCExAO
Mamadou N'Diaye, Frantz Martinache, Nemanja Jovanovic, Julien Lozi,, Olivier Guyon, Barnaby Norris, Alban Ceau, David Mary

TL;DR
This paper presents a new closed-loop wavefront control method using APF-WFS to calibrate and correct island effect aberrations in ground-based telescopes, significantly improving image quality for exoplanet imaging.
Contribution
It introduces a novel calibration and control approach for island effect aberrations using APF-WFS, validated through simulations and on-sky tests with Subaru/SCExAO.
Findings
Achieved a 37% increase in Strehl ratio in visible imaging.
Validated the control loop in laboratory and on-sky conditions.
Demonstrated potential for ELTs to mitigate similar artifacts.
Abstract
Island effect (IE) aberrations are induced by differential pistons, tips, and tilts between neighboring pupil segments on ground-based telescopes, which severely limit the observations of circumstellar environments on the recently deployed exoplanet imagers (e.g., VLT/SPHERE, Gemini/GPI, Subaru/SCExAO) during the best observing conditions. Caused by air temperature gradients at the level of the telescope spiders, these aberrations were recently diagnosed with success on VLT/SPHERE, but so far no complete calibration has been performed to overcome this issue. We propose closed-loop focal plane wavefront control based on the asymmetric Fourier pupil wavefront sensor (APF-WFS) to calibrate these aberrations and improve the image quality of exoplanet high-contrast instruments in the presence of the IE. Assuming the archetypal four-quadrant aperture geometry in 8m class telescopes, we…
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