On-sky validation of image-based adaptive optics wavefront sensor referencing
Nour Skaf, Olivier Guyon, Eric Gendron, Kyohoon Ahn, Arielle, Bertrou-Cantou, Anthony Boccaletti, Jesse Cranney, Thayne Currie, Vincent, Deo, Billy Edwards, Florian Ferreira, Damien Gratadour, Julien Lozi, Barnaby, Norris, Arnaud Sevin, Fabrice Vidal, Sebastien Vievard

TL;DR
This paper introduces DrWHO, a novel on-sky adaptive optics wavefront sensor method that iteratively compensates static and slow aberrations, significantly improving high-contrast imaging for exoplanet detection.
Contribution
The paper presents the DrWHO algorithm, a new focal-plane wavefront sensing technique that adaptively corrects non-common path aberrations without relying on models or calibration.
Findings
Simulations show 82% correction of NCPAs.
On-sky tests demonstrate a 15.7% PSF quality improvement.
The method is robust, model-free, and compatible with various wavefront control techniques.
Abstract
Differentiating between an exoplanet signal and residual speckle noise is a key challenge in high-contrast imaging. Speckles are due to a combination of fast, slow and static wavefront aberrations introduced by atmospheric turbulence and instrument optics. While wavefront control techniques developed over the last decade have shown promise in minimizing fast atmospheric residuals, slow and static aberrations such as non-common path aberrations (NCPAs) remain a key limiting factor for exoplanet detection. NCPA are not seen by the wavefront sensor (WFS) of the adaptive optics (AO) loop, hence the difficulty in correcting them. We propose to improve the identification and rejection of those aberrations. The algorithm DrWHO, performs frequent compensation of static and quasi-static aberrations to boost image contrast. By changing the WFS reference at every iteration of the algorithm, DrWHO…
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.
