Kelsey Miller
University of Arizona
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kelsey Miller.
Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems | 2017
Kelsey Miller; Olivier Guyon; Jared R. Males
Abstract. Direct imaging of exoplanets requires establishing and maintaining a high-contrast dark field (DF) within the science image to a high degree of precision (10−10). Current approaches aimed at establishing the DF, such as electric field conjugation (EFC), have been demonstrated in the lab and have proven capable of high-contrast DF generation. The same approaches have been considered for the maintenance of the DF as well. However, these methods rely on phase diversity measurements, which require field modulation; this interrupts the DF and consequently competes with the science acquisition. We introduce and demonstrate spatial linear dark field control (LDFC) as an alternative technique by which the high-contrast DF can be maintained without modulation. Once the DF has been established by conventional EFC, spatial LDFC locks the high-contrast state of the DF by operating a closed loop around the linear response of the bright field (BF) to wavefront variations that modify both the BF and the DF. We describe the fundamental operating principles of spatial LDFC and provide numerical simulations of its operation as a DF stabilization technique that is capable of wavefront correction within the DF without interrupting science acquisition.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Jennifer Lumbres; Jared R. Males; Ewan S. Douglas; Laird M. Close; Kerri Cahoy; Ashley Carlton; Jim Clark; David S. Doelman; Lee D. Feinberg; Olivier Guyon; Justin Knight; Weston Marlow; Kelsey Miller; Katie M. Morzinski; Emiel H. Por; Alexander T. Rodack; Lauren Schatz; Frans Snik; Kyle Van Gorkom; Michael J. Wilby
The challenges of high contrast imaging (HCI) for detecting exoplanets for both ground and space applications can be met with extreme adaptive optics (ExAO), a high-order adaptive optics system that performs wavefront sensing (WFS) and correction at high speed. We describe 2 ExAO optical system designs, one each for ground- based telescopes and space-based missions, and examine them using the angular spectrum Fresnel propagation module within the Physical Optics Propagation in Python (POPPY) package. We present an end-to-end (E2E) simulation of the MagAO-X instrument, an ExAO system capable of delivering 6x10-5 visible-light raw contrast for static, noncommon path aberrations without atmosphere. We present an E2E simulation of a laser guidestar (LGS) companion spacecraft testbed demonstration, which uses a remote beacon to increase the signal available for WFS and control of the primary aperture segments of a future large space telescope, providing of order 10 factor improvement for relaxing observatory stability requirements.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Jared R. Males; Laird M. Close; Kelsey Miller; Lauren Schatz; Jennifer Lumbres; David S. Doelman; Frans Snik; Olivier Guyon; Justin Knight; Alexander T. Rodack; Katie M. Morzinski; Nemanja Jovanovic; Julien Lozi; Benjamin A. Mazin; Michael J. Ireland; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Christoph U. Keller; Kyle Van Gorkom; Joseph D. Long; Alexander D. Hedglen; Maggie Y. Kautz; Christopher Bohlman; Ewan S. Douglas; Katherine B. Follette; O. Durney; Victor Gasho; Phil Hinz; Madison Jean; J. Noenickx; Dan Alfred
MagAO-X is an entirely new extreme adaptive optics system for the Magellan Clay 6.5 m telescope, funded by the NSF MRI program starting in Sep 2016. The key science goal of MagAO-X is high-contrast imaging of accreting protoplanets at Hα. With 2040 actuators operating at up to 3630 Hz, MagAO-X will deliver high Strehls (> 70%), high resolution (19 mas), and high contrast (< 1 × 10-4 ) at Hα (656 nm). We present an overview of the MagAO-X system, review the system design, and discuss the current project status.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Nemanja Jovanovic; Olivier Guyon; Mamadou N'Diaye; Raphaël Galicher; Dan Sirbu; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Marie Ygouf; Pierre Baudoz; Jonas Kühn; Elsa Huby; Michael J. Wilby; Emiel H. Por; Sebastiaan Y. Haffert; Christoph U. Keller; Frans Snik; Kelsey Miller; James K. Wallace; Mathilde Beaulieu; Eric Cady; J. B. Jewell; Johan Mazoyer; Olivier Absil; Garreth Ruane; Laurent Pueyo; Michael Bottom; Brunella Carlomagno; Alexis Carlotti; David S. Doelman; Kevin Fogarty; Justin Knight
The Optimal Optical Coronagraph (OOC) Workshop held at the Lorentz Center in September 2017 in Leiden, the Netherlands, gathered a diverse group of 25 researchers working on exoplanet instrumentation to stimulate the emergence and sharing of new ideas. In this second installment of a series of three papers summarizing the outcomes of the OOC workshop, we present an overview of common path wavefront sensing/control and Coherent Differential Imaging techniques, highlight the latest results, and expose their relative strengths and weaknesses. We layout critical milestones for the field with the aim of enhancing future ground/space based high contrast imaging platforms. Techniques like these will help to bridge the daunting contrast gap required to image a terrestrial planet in the zone where it can retain liquid water, in reflected light around a G type star from space.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Kelsey Miller; Jared R. Males; Olivier Guyon; Laird M. Close; David S. Doelman; Frans Snik; Emiel H. Por; Michael J. Wilby; Chris Bohlman; Jennifer Lumbres; Kyle Van Gorkom; Maggie Y. Kautz; Alexander T. Rodack; Justin Knight; Nemanja Jovanovic; Katie M. Morzinski; Lauren Schatz
The Magellan extreme adaptive optics (MagAO-X) instrument is a new extreme adaptive optics (ExAO) system designed for operation in the visible to near-IR which will deliver high contrast-imaging capabilities. The main AO system will be driven by a pyramid wavefront sensor (PyWFS); however, to mitigate the impact of quasi-static and non-common path (NCP) aberrations, focal plane wavefront sensing (FPWFS) in the form of low-order wavefront sensing (LOWFS) and spatial linear dark field control (LDFC) will be employed behind a vector apodizing phase plate (vAPP) coronagraph using rejected starlight at an intermediate focal plane. These techniques will allow for continuous high-contrast imaging performance at the raw contrast level delivered by the vAPP coronagraph ( 6 x 10-5). We present simulation results for LOWFS and spatial LDFC with a vAPP coronagraph, as well as laboratory results for both algorithms implemented with a vAPP coronagraph at the University of Arizona Extreme Wavefront Control Lab.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Kelsey Miller; Alexander T. Rodack; Jennifer Lumbres; Justin Knight; Jared R. Males; Olivier Guyon; Kyle Van Gorkom
The MagAO-X instrument is an upgrade of the Magellan AO system that will introduce extreme adaptive optics capabilities for high-contrast imaging at visible and near-infrared wavelengths. A central component of this system is a 2040-actuator microelectromechanical (MEMS) deformable mirror (DM) from Boston Micromachines Corp. (BMC) that will operate at 3.63 kHz for high-order wavefront control. Two additional DMs from ALPAO will perform low-order and non-common-path science-arm wavefront correction. The accuracy of the wavefront correction is limited by our ability to command these DMs to a desired shape, which requires a careful characterization of each DM surface. We have developed a characterization pipeline that uses a Zygo Verifire Interferometer to measure the surface response and a Karhunen-Loeve transform to remove noise from our measurements. We present our progress in the characterization process and the results of our pipeline applied to an ALPAO DM97 and a BMC Kilo-DM, demonstrating the ability to drive the DMs to a flat of ≤2nm and ≤4nm RMS in our beam footprint on the University of Arizona Wavefront Control (UAWFC) testbed.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Kelsey Miller; Olivier Guyon
This paper presents the early-stage simulation results of linear dark field control (LDFC) as a new approach to maintaining a stable dark hole within a stellar post-coronagraphic PSF. In practice, conventional speckle nulling is used to create a dark hole in the PSF, and LDFC is then employed to maintain the dark field by using information from the bright speckle field. The concept exploits the linear response of the bright speckle intensity to wavefront variations in the pupil, and therefore has many advantages over conventional speckle nulling as a method for stabilizing the dark hole. In theory, LDFC is faster, more sensitive, and more robust than using conventional speckle nulling techniques, like electric field conjugation, to maintain the dark hole. In this paper, LDFC theory, linear bright speckle characterization, and first results in simulation are presented as an initial step toward the deployment of LDFC on the UA Wavefront Control testbed in the coming year.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Ewan S. Douglas; Neil Zimmerman; Garreth Ruane; Johan Mazoyer; A. J. Eldorado Riggs; Brunella Carlomagno; Elsa Huby; Kevin Fogarty; Emiel H. Por; Olivier Absil; Pierre Baudoz; Raphaël Galicher; Mathilde Beaulieu; Eric Cady; Alexis Carlotti; David S. Doelman; Olivier Guyon; Sebastiaan Y. Haffert; J. B. Jewell; Nemanja Jovanovic; Christoph U. Keller; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Justin Knight; Jonas Kühn; Kelsey Miller; Mamadou N’Diaye; Laurent Pueyo; Dan Sirbu; Frans Snik; James K. Wallace
The Optimal Optical Coronagraph (OOC) Workshop at the Lorentz Center in September 2017 in Leiden, the Netherlands gathered a diverse group of 25 researchers working on exoplanet instrumentation to stimulate the emergence and sharing of new ideas. In this first installment of a series of three papers summarizing the outcomes of the OOC workshop, we present an overview of design methods and optical performance metrics developed for coronagraph instruments. The design and optimization of coronagraphs for future telescopes has progressed rapidly over the past several years in the context of space mission studies for Exo-C, WFIRST, HabEx, and LUVOIR as well as ground-based telescopes. Design tools have been developed at several institutions to optimize a variety of coronagraph mask types. We aim to give a broad overview of the approaches used, examples of their utility, and provide the optimization tools to the community. Though it is clear that the basic function of coronagraphs is to suppress starlight while maintaining light from off-axis sources, our community lacks a general set of standard performance metrics that apply to both detecting and characterizing exoplanets. The attendees of the OOC workshop agreed that it would benefit our community to clearly define quantities for comparing the performance of coronagraph designs and systems. Therefore, we also present a set of metrics that may be applied to theoretical designs, testbeds, and deployed instruments. We show how these quantities may be used to easily relate the basic properties of the optical instrument to the detection significance of the given point source in the presence of realistic noise.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Lauren Schatz; Olivier Guyon; Jennifer Lumbres; Kelsey Miller; Justin Knight; Alexander T. Rodack; Joseph D. Long; Kyle Van Gorkom; Madison Jean; Maggie Y. Kautz; Jared R. Males; Laird M. Close; O. Durney; Michael Hart
Adaptive optics systems correct atmospheric turbulence in real time. Most adaptive optics systems used routinely correct in the near infrared, at wavelengths greater than 1 μm. MagAO- X is a new extreme adaptive optics (ExAO) instrument that will offer corrections at visible-to- near-IR wavelengths. MagAO-X will achieve Strehl ratios of ≥70% at Hα when running the 2040 actuator deformable mirror at 3.6 kHz. A visible pyramid wavefront sensor (PWFS) optimized for sensing at 600-1000 nm wavelengths will provide the high-order wavefront sensing on MagAO-X. We present the optical design and predicted performance of the MagAO-X pyramid wavefront sensor.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Runa Briguglio; Fernando Quiros-Pacheco; Jared R. Males; Marco Xompero; Armando Riccardi; Laird M. Close; Katie M. Morzinski; Simone Esposito; Enrico Pinna; Alfio Puglisi; Lauren Schatz; Kelsey Miller
In this paper we describe the procedure for the optical calibration of large size deformable mirrors, acting as wavefront correctors for adaptive optics systems. Adaptive optics compensate the disturbance due to the atmospheric turbulence to restore the telescope resolution. We will showcase in particular the activities performed for the Adaptive Secondary Mirror (ASM) of the Magellan Adaptive Optics system (MagAO), which is an instrument for the 6.5 m Magellan Clay Telescope, located at Las Campanas Observatory, in Chile. The MagAO ASM calibration is part of the MagAO-2K project, a major MagAO upgrade that started in 2016 with the goal of boosting adaptive optics (AO) correction at visible wavelengths to image exoplanets. For the first time, the optical quality of MagAO mirror is reported. We describe the procedures developed to achieve high SNR interferometric measurements of the ASM modes under the presence of dome convection noise and telescope vibrations. These measurements were required to produce an improved control matrix with up to 500 modes to close the AO loop on sky with enhanced performances. An updated slaving algorithm was developed to improve the control of actuators vignetted by the central obscuration. The calibrations yielded also a new ASM flattening command, updating the one in use since the MagAO commissioning in 2013. With the new flattening command, a 22 nm RMS surface error was achieved. Finally, we present on-sky results showing the MagAO performance achieved with the new calibrations.