Paper
Single-star optical turbulence profiling techniques for the SHIMM and other Shack-Hartmann instruments
Authors
Ryan Griffiths, Timothy Butterley, Richard Wilson, James Osborn
Abstract
Atmospheric optical turbulence (OT) monitoring is crucial for site characterisation at astronomical observatories and optical communications ground stations. The Shack-Hartmann Image Motion Monitor (SHIMM) instrument implements a fast, infrared Shack-Hartmann sensor to measure a low-resolution OT profile continuously throughout the day and night. This work presents advances made in Shack-Hartman optical turbulence profiling techniques implemented on the SHIMM, including the derivation and validation of Z-tilt weighting functions, implementation of methods for correcting for non-zero exposure times, and for estimating the coherence time of optical turbulence using the profile coupled with the Fast Defocus method. These techniques were tested via end-to-end Monte Carlo simulations of the SHIMM instrument. All measurements of integrated OT parameters were found to be in strong agreement with the simulation inputs evidenced by correlation coefficients close to one, small RMS error and bias. The accuracy of a four-layer model was also investigated, which showed high correlation with simulation inputs for all layers even in daytime OT conditions. This study suggests a Cn^2 sensitivity limit in the region of 2x10^-15 m^(1/3) and displays evidence of a cross-talk effect between the strong ground layer and first atmospheric layer.
Metadata
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Raw Data (Debug)
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