A Holographic Diffuser Generalised Optical Differentiation Wavefront Sensor
Luca Marafatto, Roberto Ragazzoni, Daniele Vassallo, Maria Bergomi,, Federico Biondi, Elena Carolo, Simonetta Chinellato, Marco Dima, Jacopo, Farinato, Davide Greggio, Marco Gullieuszik, Demetrio Magrin, Elisa, Portaluri, Gabriele Umbriaco, Valentina Viotto

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel holographic diffuser-based wavefront sensor that decouples sensitivity and dynamic range, enabling high performance in telescopic applications through a simple, adaptable optical design.
Contribution
It proposes a new wavefront sensor design using a holographic diffuser to achieve high sensitivity and dynamic range without trade-offs, improving upon existing sensors.
Findings
Holographic diffuser enables high sensitivity and dynamic range.
The diffuser's parameters can be tuned for different seeing conditions.
The design allows for static and dynamic adjustments in the sensor setup.
Abstract
The wavefront sensors used today at the biggest World's telescopes have either a high dynamic range or a high sensitivity, and they are subject to a linear trade off between these two parameters. A new class of wavefront sensors, the Generalised Optical Differentiation Wavefront Sensors, has been devised, in a way not to undergo this linear trade off and to decouple the dynamic range from the sensitivity. This new class of WFSs is based on the light filtering in the focal plane from a dedicated amplitude filter, which is a hybrid between a linear filter, whose physical dimension is related to the dynamic range, and a step in the amplitude, whose size is related to the sensitivity. We propose here a possible technical implementation of this kind of WFS, making use of a simple holographic diffuser to diffract part of the light in a ring shape around the pin of a pyramid wavefront sensor.…
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