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Dive into the research topics where Kenneth Avicola is active.

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Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2000

First Light Adaptive Optics Images from the Keck II Telescope : A New Era of High Angular Resolution Imagery

Peter L. Wizinowich; D. S. Acton; Christian R. Shelton; Paul J. Stomski; J. Gathright; K. Ho; William Lupton; Kevin Tsubota; Olivier Lai; Claire E. Max; James M. Brase; Jong R. An; Kenneth Avicola; Scot S. Olivier; Donald T. Gavel; Bruce A. Macintosh; Andrea M. Ghez; J. Larkin

ABSTRACT Adaptive optics (AO) is a technology that corrects in real time for the blurring effects of atmospheric turbulence, in principle allowing Earth‐bound telescopes to achieve their diffraction limit and to “see” as clearly as if they were in space. The power of AO using natural guide stars has been amply demonstrated in recent years on telescopes up to 3–4 m in diameter. The next breakthrough in astronomical resolution was expected to occur with the implementation of AO on the new generation of large, 8–10 m diameter telescopes. In this paper we report the initial results from the first of these AO systems, now coming on line on the 10 m diameter Keck II Telescope. The results include the highest angular resolution images ever obtained from a single telescope (0 \documentclass{aastex} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{bm} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{pifont} \usepackage{stmaryrd} \usepackage{textcomp} \usepackage{portland,xspace} \usepackage{amsmath,amsx...


Optics Letters | 2000

Diffractive Alvarez lens

Ian M. Barton; Sham N. Dixit; Leslie J. Summers; Charles A. Thompson; Kenneth Avicola; Julia Wilhelmsen

A diffractive Alvarez lens is demonstrated that consists of two separate phase plates, each having complementary 16-level surface-relief profiles that contain cubic phase delays. Translation of these two components in the plane of the phase plates is shown to produce a variable astigmatic focus. Both spherical and cylindrical phase profiles are demonstrated with good accuracy, and the discrete surface-relief features are shown to cause less than lambda/10 wave-front aberration in the transmitted wave front over a 40 mm x 80 mm region.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 1994

Sodium-layer laser-guide-star experimental results

Kenneth Avicola; James M. Brase; James R. Morris; Horst D. Bissinger; John Duff; Herbert W. Friedman; Donald T. Gavel; Claire E. Max; Scot S. Olivier; Robert W. Presta; David A. Rapp; J. T. Salmon; Kenneth E. Waltjen

We describe a series of experiments to characterize the sodium-layer guide star that was formed with the high-power laser developed for the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Atomic Vapor Laser Isotope Separation program. An emission spot size of 3.0 m was measured, with an implied laser irradiance spot diameter of 2.0 m. The rms spot motion at the higher laser powers, with active beam-pointing control, was less than 0.5 arcsec and had little effect on the observed spot size under these conditions. We measured the resonant backscatter from the sodium layer as a function of laser power to obtain a saturation curve. With a transmitted power of 1100 W and an atmospheric transmission of 0.6, the irradiance from the guide star at the ground was 10 (photons/cm2)/ms, corresponding to a visual magnitude of 5.1. The implications for the performance of wave-front sensors with a laser guide star of this magnitude and resulting closed-loop adaptive-optics performance are discussed.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 1994

Design, layout, and early results of a feasibility experiment for sodium-layer laser-guide-star adaptive optics

Claire E. Max; Kenneth Avicola; James M. Brase; Herbert W. Friedman; Horst D. Bissinger; John Duff; Donald T. Gavel; J. A. Horton; R. Kiefer; James R. Morris; Scot S. Olivier; Robert W. Presta; David A. Rapp; J. T. Salmon; Kenneth E. Waltjen

We describe the design and the early results of a feasibility experiment for sodium-layer laser-guide-star adaptive optics. Copper-vapor-laser-pumped dye lasers from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s Atomic Vapor Laser Isotope Separation program are used to create the guide star. The laser beam is projected upward from a beam director that is located ~5 m from a 0.5-m telescope and forms an irradiance spot ~2 m in diameter at the atmospheric-sodium layer (at an altitude of 95 km). The laser guide star is approximately fifth magnitude and is visible to the naked eye at the top of the Rayleigh-scattered laser beam. To date, we have made photometric measurements and open-loop wave-front-sensor measurements of the laser guide star. We give an overview of the experiment’s design and the laser systems, describe the experimental setup, show preliminary photometric and open-loop wave-front-sensor data on the guide star, and present predictions of closed-loop adaptive-optics performance based on these experimental data. The long-term goal of this effort is to develop laser guide stars and adaptive optics for use with large astronomical telescopes.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 1998

Status of the W.M. Keck Adaptive Optics Facility

Peter L. Wizinowich; D. Scott Acton; Tom Gregory; Paul J. Stomski; Jong R. An; Kenneth Avicola; James M. Brase; Herbert W. Friedman; Donald T. Gavel; Claire E. Max

We will review the status of the natural/laser guide star adaptive optics facility that is being constructed for the Keck II telescope.


1994 Symposium on Astronomical Telescopes & Instrumentation for the 21st Century | 1994

Performance of adaptive optics at Lick Observatory

Scot S. Olivier; Jong R. An; Kenneth Avicola; Horst D. Bissinger; James M. Brase; Herbert W. Friedman; Donald T. Gavel; Erik M. Johansson; Claire E. Max; Kenneth E. Waltjen; William A. Fisher; William C. Bradford

A prototype adaptive optics system has been developed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory for use at Lick Observatory. This system is based on an ITEK 69-actuator continuous-surface deformable mirror, a Kodak fast-framing intensified CCD camera, and a Mercury VME board containing four Intel i860 processors. The system has been tested using natural reference stars on the 40-inch Nickel telescope at Lick Observatory yielding up to a factor of 10 increase in image peak intensity and a factor of 6 reduction in image full width at half maximum. These results are consistent with theoretical expectations.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2000

Initial performance of the Keck AO wavefront controller system

Erik M. Johansson; D. Scott Acton; Jong R. An; Kenneth Avicola; Barton V. Beeman; James M. Brase; Carmen J. Carrano; J. Gathright; Donald T. Gavel; Randall L. Hurd; Olivier Lai; William Lupton; Bruce A. Macintosh; Claire E. Max; Scot S. Olivier; J. C. Shelton; Paul J. Stomski; Kevin Tsubota; Kenneth E. Waltjen; J. Watson; Peter L. Wizinowich

The wavefront controller for the Keck Observatory AO system consists of two separate real-time control loops: a tip-tilt control loop to remove tilt from the incoming wavefront, and a deformable mirror control loop to remove higher-order aberrations. In this paper, we describe these control loops and analyze their performance using diagnostic data acquired during the integration and testing of the AO system on the telescope. Disturbance rejection curves for the controllers are calculated from the experimental data and compared to theory. The residual wavefront errors due to control loop bandwidth are also calculated from the data, and possible improvements to the controller performance are discussed.


SPIE 44th Annual Meeting of the International Symposium on Optical Science, Engineering, and Instrumentation, Denver, CO (US), 07/18/1999--07/23/1999 | 1999

Improved performance of the laser guide star adaptive optics system at Lick Observatory

Scot S. Olivier; Donald T. Gavel; Herbert W. Friedman; Claire E. Max; Jong R. An; Kenneth Avicola; Brian J. Bauman; James M. Brase; Eugene Warren Campbell; Carmen J. Carrano; Jeffrey B. Cooke; Gary J. Freeze; Elinor L. Gates; Vernon Keith Kanz; Thomas C. Kuklo; Bruce A. Macintosh; Michael J. Newman; Edward L. Pierce; Kenneth E. Waltjen; J. Watson

Results of experiments with the laser guide star adaptive optics system on the 3-meter Shane telescope at Lick Observatory have demonstrated a factor of 4 performance improvement over previous results. Stellar images recorded at a wavelength of 2 micrometers were corrected to over 40 percent of the theoretical diffraction-limited peak intensity. For the previous two years, this sodium-layer laser guide star system has corrected stellar images at this wavelength to approximately 10 percent of the theoretical peak intensity limit. After a campaign to improve the beam quality of the laser system, and to improve calibration accuracy and stability of the adaptive optics system using new techniques for phase retrieval and phase-shifting diffraction interferometry, the system performance has been substantially increased. The next step will be to use the Lick system for astronomical science observations, and to demonstrate this level of performance with the new system being installed on the 10-meter Keck II telescope.


Annual meeting of the Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers, San Diego, CA (United States), 27 Jul - 1 Aug 1997 | 1997

First significant image improvement from a sodium-layer laser guide star adaptive optics system at Lick Observatory

Scot S. Olivier; Claire E. Max; Herbert W. Friedman; Jong R. An; Kenneth Avicola; Barton V. Beeman; Horst D. Bissinger; James M. Brase; G.V. Erbert; Donald T. Gavel; K. Kanz; Bruce A. Macintosh; K.P. Neeb; Kenneth E. Waltjen

Atmospheric turbulence severely limits the resolution of ground-based telescopes. Adaptive optics can correct for the aberrations caused by the atmosphere, but requires a bright wavefront reference source in close angular proximity to the object being imaged. Since natural reference stars of the necessary brightness are relatively rare, methods of generating artificial reference beacons have been under active investigation for more than a decade. In this paper, we report the first significant image improvement achieved using a sodium-layer laser guide star as a wavefront reference for a high-order adaptive optics system. An artificial beacon was created by resonant scattering from atomic sodium in the mesosphere, at an altitude of 95 km. Using this laser guide star, an adaptive optics system on the 3 m Shane Telescope at Lick Observatory produced a factor of 2.4 increase in peak intensity and a factor of 2 decrease in full width at half maximum of a stellar image, compared with image motion compensation alone. The Strehl ratio when using the laser guide star as the reference was 65% of that obtained with a natural guide star, and the image full widths at half maximum were identical, 0.3 arc sec, using either the laser or the natural guide star. This sodium-layer laser guide star technique holds great promise for the worlds largest telescopes.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 1998

Wavefront control system for the Keck telescope

James M. Brase; Jong R. An; Kenneth Avicola; Barton V. Beeman; Donald T. Gavel; Randall L. Hurd; Brooks Johnston; Holger E. Jones; Thomas C. Kuklo; Claire E. Max; Scot S. Olivier; Kenneth E. Waltjen; J. Watson

The laser guide star adaptive optics system currently being developed for the Keck 2 telescope consists of several major subsystems: the optical bench, wavefront control, user interface and supervisory control, and the laser system. The paper describes the design and implementation of the wavefront control subsystem that controls a 349 actuator deformable mirror for high order correction and tip-tilt mirrors for stabilizing the image and laser positions.

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Claire E. Max

University of California

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Donald T. Gavel

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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James M. Brase

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Herbert W. Friedman

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Kenneth E. Waltjen

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Horst D. Bissinger

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Jong R. An

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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David A. Rapp

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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J. Thaddeus Salmon

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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