The Bright Pyramid Wavefront Sensor
Benjamin L. Gerard, Vincent Chambouleyron, Rebecca Jensen-Clem,, Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Sauvage

TL;DR
This paper introduces the bright pyramid wavefront sensor (bPWFS), a novel AO wavefront sensor that enhances measurement accuracy and linearity, potentially improving high contrast imaging for exoplanet detection.
Contribution
The paper presents the design and analysis of the bPWFS, which improves both linearity and measurement error without trade-offs, unlike existing sensors.
Findings
bPWFS shows improved linearity and measurement error over non-modulated PWFS
AO error budget analysis supports the sensor's potential benefits
Testbed results demonstrate promising performance of the bPWFS
Abstract
Extreme adaptive optics (AO) is crucial for enabling the contrasts needed for ground-based high contrast imaging instruments to detect exoplanets. Pushing exoplanet imaging detection sensitivities towards lower mass, closer separations, and older planets will require upgrading AO wavefront sensors (WFSs) to be more efficient. In particular, future WFS designs will aim to improve a WFS's measurement error (i.e., the wavefront level at which photon noise, detector noise, and/or sky background limits a WFS measurement) and linearity (i.e., the wavefront level, in the absence of photon noise, aliasing, and servo lag, at which an AO loop can close and the corresponding closed-loop residual level). We present one such design here called the bright pyramid WFS (bPWFS), which improves both the linearity and measurement errors as compared to the non-modulated pyramid WFS (PWFS). The bPWFS is a…
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