Identification and adaptive control of a high-contrast focal plane wavefront correction system
He Sun, N.Jeremy Kasdin, Robert Vanderbei

TL;DR
This paper introduces an expectation-maximization algorithm that adaptively identifies and updates the linear model of a high-contrast imaging system, enhancing wavefront correction accuracy and speed.
Contribution
It presents a novel E-M based method for real-time system identification and adaptation in wavefront correction, addressing model inaccuracies and temporal variations.
Findings
Improved model accuracy in simulations and experiments.
Enhanced wavefront correction efficiency and speed.
Effective handling of unmeasurable hidden variables.
Abstract
All coronagraphic instruments for exoplanet high-contrast imaging need wavefront correction systems to reject optical aberrations and create sufficiently dark holes. Since the most efficient wavefront correction algorithms (controllers and estimators) are usually model-based, the modeling accuracy of the system influences the ultimate wavefront correction performance. Currently, wavefront correction systems are typically approximated as linear systems using Fourier optics. However, the Fourier optics model is usually biased due to inaccuracies in the layout measurements, the imperfect diagnoses of inherent optical aberrations, and a lack of knowledge of the deformable mirrors (actuator gains and influence functions). Moreover, the telescope optical system varies over time because of instrument instabilities and environmental effects. In this paper, we present an expectation-maximization…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Advanced optical system design · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
