Single conjugate adaptive optics for the ELT instrument METIS
Stefan Hippler, Markus Feldt, Thomas Bertram, Wolfgang Brandner,, Faustine Cantalloube, Brunella Carlomagno, Olivier Absil, Andreas Obereder,, Iuliia Shatokhina, Remko Stuik

TL;DR
This paper evaluates wavefront sensing options for the ELT's METIS instrument, concluding that a pyramid wavefront sensor in the near-infrared provides optimal high-contrast imaging performance for exoplanet studies.
Contribution
It presents a detailed simulation-based analysis comparing Shack-Hartmann and pyramid wavefront sensors for METIS, identifying the pyramid sensor as the optimal choice.
Findings
Near-infrared is the best spectral regime for METIS.
Pyramid wavefront sensor outperforms Shack-Hartmann under realistic conditions.
Optimal AO performance enhances high-contrast imaging for exoplanet detection.
Abstract
The ELT is a 39m large, ground-based optical and near- to mid-infrared telescope under construction in the Chilean Atacama desert. Operation is planned to start around the middle of the next decade. All first light instruments will come with wavefront sensing devices that allow control of the ELT's intrinsic M4 and M5 wavefront correction units, thus building an adaptive optics (AO) system. To take advantage of the ELT's optical performance, full diffraction-limited operation is required and only a high performance AO system can deliver this. Further technically challenging requirements for the AO come from the exoplanet research field, where the task to resolve the very small angular separations between host star and planet, has also to take into account the high-contrast ratio between the two objects. We present in detail the results of our simulations and their impact on…
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