Presentation + Paper
27 August 2024 The evolution of robotic adaptive optics: Robo-AO 2 and SIGHT
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Robo-AO was the first fully automated astronomical adaptive optics (AO) system, and was able to complete surveys of stellar objects in a fraction of the time of other AO systems. Two new robotic AO systems build on the heritage of Robo-AO. Robo-AO 2 is a site optimized system for the U. Hawai'i 2.2-m telescope on Maunakea, with an improved design and better sensitivity it will be able to continue the high cadence, high resolution observations that Robo-AO pioneered. SIGHT will be installed on the Palomar 200-inch telescope, and is designed to improve the delivered image quality to instruments at the Cassegrain focus (initially it will feed the Next Generation Palomar Spectrograph); the goal is to decrease the seeing by half. The two instruments have different science goals and performance requirements, but they share a common software architecture that allows the flexibility to do fully autonomous observations in these far different regimes. This presentation will discuss the development of the Robo-AO architecture and the evolution of that software into a more flexible system that can underpin the operation of different AO systems while still delivering fully autonomous capability.
Conference Presentation
(2024) Published by SPIE. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Reed Riddle, James Ou, Christoph Baranec, Richard Dekany, and Paul Barnes "The evolution of robotic adaptive optics: Robo-AO 2 and SIGHT", Proc. SPIE 13097, Adaptive Optics Systems IX, 130972D (27 August 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3020869
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KEYWORDS
Adaptive optics

Robotics

Deformable mirrors

Design

Astronomical software

Laser guide stars

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