James Webb Space Telescope Optical Simulation Testbed V: Wide-field phase retrieval assessment
Iva Laginja, Greg Brady, Remi Soummer, Sylvain Egron, Christopher, Moriarty, Charles-Philippe Lajoie, Aurelie Bonnefois, Vincent Michau, Elodie, Choquet, Marc Ferrari, Lucie Leboulleux, Olivier Levecq, Mamadou N'Diaye,, Marshall D. Perrin, Peter Petrone, Laurent Pueyo

TL;DR
The paper evaluates the JWST Optical Simulation Testbed's optical quality and wide-field performance, demonstrating its utility for wavefront sensing and control studies for JWST and future space telescopes.
Contribution
It provides an assessment of the testbed's optical performance and its application for wavefront sensing algorithm development for segmented space telescopes.
Findings
JOST produces JWST-like PSFs and images comparable to cryotesting data.
Optical quality is maintained over a wide field of view.
The testbed supports analysis of wavefront sensing algorithms like LAPD.
Abstract
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Optical Simulation Testbed (JOST) is a hardware simulator for wavefront sensing and control designed to produce JWST-like images. A model of the JWST three mirror anas- tigmat is realized with three lenses in the form of a Cooke triplet, which provides JWST-like optical quality over a field equivalent to a NIRCam module. An Iris AO hexagonally segmented mirror stands in for the JWST primary. This setup successfully produces images extremely similar to expected JWST in-flight point spread functions (PSFs), and NIRCam images from cryotesting, in terms of the PSF morphology and sampling relative to the diffraction limit. The segmentation of the primary mirror into subapertures introduces complexity into wavefront sensing and control (WFS&C) of large space based telescopes like JWST. JOST provides a platform for independent analysis of WFS&C scenarios…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
