Marco Bonaglia
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Featured researches published by Marco Bonaglia.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
S. Rabien; N. Ageorges; L. Barl; Udo Beckmann; T. Blümchen; Marco Bonaglia; J. Borelli; Joar Brynnel; Lorenzo Busoni; Luca Carbonaro; R. Davies; M. Deysenroth; O. Durney; M. Elberich; Simone Esposito; Victor Gasho; Wolfgang Gässler; Hans Gemperlein; R. Genzel; Richard F. Green; M. Haug; M. L. Hart; P. Hubbard; S. Kanneganti; Elena Masciadri; J. Noenickx; Gilles Orban de Xivry; D. Peter; A. Quirrenbach; M. Rademacher
ARGOS is the Laser Guide Star adaptive optics system for the Large Binocular Telescope. Aiming for a wide field adaptive optics correction, ARGOS will equip both sides of LBT with a multi laser beacon system and corresponding wavefront sensors, driving LBTs adaptive secondary mirrors. Utilizing high power pulsed green lasers the artificial beacons are generated via Rayleigh scattering in earths atmosphere. ARGOS will project a set of three guide stars above each of LBTs mirrors in a wide constellation. The returning scattered light, sensitive particular to the turbulence close to ground, is detected in a gated wavefront sensor system. Measuring and correcting the ground layers of the optical distortions enables ARGOS to achieve a correction over a very wide field of view. Taking advantage of this wide field correction, the science that can be done with the multi object spectrographs LUCIFER will be boosted by higher spatial resolution and strongly enhanced flux for spectroscopy. Apart from the wide field correction ARGOS delivers in its ground layer mode, we foresee a diffraction limited operation with a hybrid Sodium laser Rayleigh beacon combination.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Simone Esposito; Enrico Pinna; Fernando Quiros-Pacheco; Alfio Puglisi; Luca Carbonaro; Marco Bonaglia; Valdemaro Biliotti; Runa Briguglio; Guido Agapito; Carmelo Arcidiacono; Lorenzo Busoni; Marco Xompero; Armando Riccardi; Luca Fini; Antonin H. Bouchez
The paper presents the preliminary design of theNat ural Guide Star Wavefront Sensor for the single conjugate AO system of the GMT telescope. The NGS Wavefront Sensor (NGWS), already identified as a pyramid sensor, will be in charge of the entire wavefront error measurement namely atmospheric turbulence and telescope aberrations, including the segment differential piston error. The paper describes the WFS opto-mechanical design with particular emphasis on the WFS board. Numerical simulations of the GMT NGS AO system are performed taking into account the main characteristics of the considered WFS unit. The simulations take into account correction of the atmospheric perturbation and control of the differential pistons of the GMT segments.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Enrico Pinna; S. Esposito; P. Hinz; Guido Agapito; Marco Bonaglia; Alfio Puglisi; Marco Xompero; Armando Riccardi; Runa Briguglio; Carmelo Arcidiacono; Luca Carbonaro; Luca Fini; M. Montoya; O. Durney
We present here SOUL: the Single conjugated adaptive Optics Upgrade for LBT. Soul will upgrade the wavefront sensors replacing the existing CCD detector with an EMCCD camera and the rest of the system in order to enable the closed loop operations at a faster cycle rate and with higher number of slopes. Thanks to reduced noise, higher number of pixel and framerate, we expect a gain (for a given SR) around 1.5–2 magnitudes at all wavelengths in the range 7.5 70% in I-band and 0.6asec seeing) and the sky coverage will be multiplied by a factor 5 at all galactic latitudes. Upgrading the SCAO systems at all the 4 focal stations, SOUL will provide these benefits in 2017 to the LBTI interferometer and in 2018 to the 2 LUCI NIR spectro-imagers. In the same year the SOUL correction will be exploited also by the new generation of LBT instruments: V-SHARK, SHARK-NIR and iLocater.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Harald Kuntschner; L. Jochum; Paola Amico; Johannes K. Dekker; Florian Kerber; Enrico Marchetti; Matteo Accardo; Roland Brast; Martin Brinkmann; Ralf Conzelmann; Bernard Delabre; Michel Duchateau; Enrico Fedrigo; Gert Finger; Christoph Frank; Fernando Gago Rodriguez; Barbara Klein; Jens Knudstrup; Miska Le Louarn; Lars Lundin; Andrea Modigliani; M. Müller; Mark Neeser; Sebastien Tordo; E. Valenti; F. Eisenhauer; E. Sturm; Helmut Feuchtgruber; Elisabeth M. George; Michael Hartl
The Enhanced Resolution Imager and Spectrograph (ERIS) is the next-generation adaptive optics near-IR imager and spectrograph for the Cassegrain focus of the Very Large Telescope (VLT) Unit Telescope 4, which will soon make full use of the Adaptive Optics Facility (AOF). It is a high-Strehl AO-assisted instrument that will use the Deformable Secondary Mirror (DSM) and the new Laser Guide Star Facility (4LGSF). The project has been approved for construction and has entered its preliminary design phase. ERIS will be constructed in a collaboration including the Max- Planck Institut für Extraterrestrische Physik, the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich and the Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri and will offer 1 - 5 μm imaging and 1 - 2.5 μm integral field spectroscopic capabilities with a high Strehl performance. Wavefront sensing can be carried out with an optical high-order NGS Pyramid wavefront sensor, or with a single laser in either an optical low-order NGS mode, or with a near-IR low-order mode sensor. Due to its highly sensitive visible wavefront sensor, and separate near-IR low-order mode, ERIS provides a large sky coverage with its 1’ patrol field radius that can even include AO stars embedded in dust-enshrouded environments. As such it will replace, with a much improved single conjugated AO correction, the most scientifically important imaging modes offered by NACO (diffraction limited imaging in the J to M bands, Sparse Aperture Masking and Apodizing Phase Plate (APP) coronagraphy) and the integral field spectroscopy modes of SINFONI, whose instrumental module, SPIFFI, will be upgraded and re-used in ERIS. As part of the SPIFFI upgrade a new higher resolution grating and a science detector replacement are envisaged, as well as PLC driven motors. To accommodate ERIS at the Cassegrain focus, an extension of the telescope back focal length is required, with modifications of the guider arm assembly. In this paper we report on the status of the baseline design. We will also report on the main science goals of the instrument, ranging from exoplanet detection and characterization to high redshift galaxy observations. We will also briefly describe the SINFONI-SPIFFI upgrade strategy, which is part of the ERIS development plan and the overall project timeline.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
Lorenzo Busoni; Marco Bonaglia; Simone Esposito; Luca Carbonaro; S. Rabien
In this paper we present the final design of the WFS unit of LBTs ARGOS facility, that will implement a GLAO system using 3 Rayleigh pulsed beacons. The ARGOS WFS is composed of two main subunits: 1) a large dichroic window that deflects the laser beam toward the WFS and transmit the visible and near-infrared wavelength to the MOSimager LUCIFER and 2) the SH-WFS that collects the backscattered light of the 3 beacons and combines the beams on a single lenslet array and detector. The WFS unit includes Pockels cells for the range gating of the laser beams, field and pupil stabilizers to compensate for the fast jitter of the laser beams and for optical flexures and a calibration unit to check the internal alignment; this unit will be also used for closed-loop laboratory tests using a MEMS-DM.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Enrico Pinna; Guido Agapito; Fernando Quiros-Pacheco; J. Antichi; Luca Carbonaro; Runa Briguglio; Marco Bonaglia; Armando Riccardi; Alfio Puglisi; Valdemaro Biliotti; Carmelo Arcidiacono; Marco Xompero; G. Di Rico; Angelo Valentini; Antonin H. Bouchez; F. Santoro; Gelys Trancho; Simone Esposito
The NGSAO, a single conjugated AO system operating with natural guide star, will be the first AO system to be operative at the Giant Magellan Telescope. The Natural Guide star Wavefront Sensor will be in charge of the entire wavefront error measurement, namely atmospheric turbulence and telescope aberrations, including the segment differential piston error. In this paper we report the opto-mechanical design of the NGWS that successfully passed the preliminary design review in July 2013. Moreover, we present the NGSAO control strategy identified for the GMT segmented pupil and the system performances for different conditions of seeing and reference star magnitude.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
S. Rabien; L. Barl; Udo Beckmann; Marco Bonaglia; J. Borelli; Joar Brynnel; Peter Buschkamp; Lorenzo Busoni; Julian C. Christou; C. Connot; Richard Davies; M. Deysenroth; Simone Esposito; Wolfgang Gässler; Hans Gemperlein; Michael Hart; M. Kulas; Michael Lefebvre; Michael Lehmitz; Tommaso Mazzoni; E. Nussbaum; Gilles Orban de Xivry; D. Peter; A. Quirrenbach; Walfried Raab; Gustavo Rahmer; Jesper Storm; J. Ziegleder
ARGOS is the Laser Guide Star and Wavefront sensing facility for the Large Binocular Telescope. With first laser light on sky in 2013, the system is currently undergoing commissioning at the telescope. We present the overall status and design, as well as first results on sky. Aiming for a wide field ground layer correction, ARGOS is designed as a multi- Rayleigh beacon adaptive optics system. A total of six powerful pulsed lasers are creating the laser guide stars in constellations above each of the LBTs primary mirrors. With a range gated detection in the wavefront sensors, and the adaptive correction by the deformable secondary’s, we expect ARGOS to enhance the image quality over a large range of seeing conditions. With the two wide field imaging and spectroscopic instruments LUCI1 and LUCI2 as receivers, a wide range of scientific programs will benefit from ARGOS. With an increased resolution, higher encircled energy, both imaging and MOS spectroscopy will be boosted in signal to noise by a large amount. Apart from the wide field correction ARGOS delivers in its ground layer mode, we already foresee the implementation of a hybrid Sodium with Rayleigh beacon combination for a diffraction limited AO performance.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Emiliano Diolaiti; P. Ciliegi; R. Abicca; Guido Agapito; Carmelo Arcidiacono; Andrea Baruffolo; M. Bellazzini; Valdemaro Biliotti; Marco Bonaglia; Giovanni Bregoli; Runa Briguglio; O. Brissaud; Lorenzo Busoni; Luca Carbonaro; A. Carlotti; E. Cascone; J.-J. Correia; Fausto Cortecchia; G. Cosentino; V. De Caprio; M. de Pascale; A. De Rosa; C. Del Vecchio; A. Delboulbé; G. Di Rico; S. Esposito; D. Fantinel; P. Feautrier; Corrado Felini; Debora Ferruzzi
MAORY is one of the four instruments for the E-ELT approved for construction. It is an adaptive optics module offering two compensation modes: multi-conjugate and single-conjugate adaptive optics. The project has recently entered its phase B. A system-level overview of the current status of the project is given in this paper.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
M. Kulas; J. Borelli; Wolfgang Gässler; D. Peter; S. Rabien; Gilles Orban de Xivry; Lorenzo Busoni; Marco Bonaglia; Tommaso Mazzoni; Gustavo Rahmer
Commissioning time for an instrument at an observatory is precious, especially the night time. Whenever astronomers come up with a software feature request or point out a software defect, the software engineers have the task to find a solution and implement it as fast as possible. In this project phase, the software engineers work under time pressure and stress to deliver a functional instrument control software (ICS). The shortness of development time during commissioning is a constraint for software engineering teams and applies to the ARGOS project as well. The goal of the ARGOS (Advanced Rayleigh guided Ground layer adaptive Optics System) project is the upgrade of the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) with an adaptive optics (AO) system consisting of six Rayleigh laser guide stars and wavefront sensors. For developing the ICS, we used the technique Test- Driven Development (TDD) whose main rule demands that the programmer writes test code before production code. Thereby, TDD can yield a software system, that grows without defects and eases maintenance. Having applied TDD in a calm and relaxed environment like office and laboratory, the ARGOS team has profited from the benefits of TDD. Before the commissioning, we were worried that the time pressure in that tough project phase would force us to drop TDD because we would spend more time writing test code than it would be worth. Despite this concern at the beginning, we could keep TDD most of the time also in this project phase This report describes the practical application and performance of TDD including its benefits, limitations and problems during the ARGOS commissioning. Furthermore, it covers our experience with pair programming and continuous integration at the telescope.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Marco Bonaglia; Lorenzo Busoni; Tommaso Mazzoni; Alfio Puglisi; J. Antichi; Simone Esposito; Gilles Orban de Xivry; S. Rabien
We present the results of the laboratory characterization of the ARGOS LGS wavefront sensor (LGSW) and dichroic units. ARGOS is the laser guide star adaptive optics system of the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). It implements a Ground Layer Adaptive Optics (GLAO) correction for LUCI, an infrared imager and multi-object spectrograph (MOS), using 3 pulsed Rayleigh beacons focused at 12km altitude. The LGSW is a Shack-Hartman sensor having 15 × 15 subaspertures over the telescope pupil. Each LGS is independently stabilized for on-sky jitter and gated to reduce spot elongation. The 3 LGS pupils are stabilized to compensate mechanical flexure and are arranged on a single detector. Two units of LGSW have been produced and tested at Arcetri Observatory. We report on the results obtained in the pre-shipment laboratory test: internal active flexure compensation loop performance, optomechanical stability under different gravity conditions, thermal cycling, Pockels cells performance. We also update on the upcoming installation and commissioning campaign at LBT.