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Featured researches published by Tuan Truong.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Reconnaissance of the HR 8799 Exosolar System. I. Near-infrared Spectroscopy

Ben R. Oppenheimer; Christoph Baranec; C. A. Beichman; Douglas Brenner; Rick Burruss; Eric Cady; Justin R. Crepp; Richard G. Dekany; Rob Fergus; David Hale; Lynne A. Hillenbrand; Sasha Hinkley; David W. Hogg; David A. King; E. R. Ligon; Thomas G. Lockhart; Ricky Nilsson; Ian R. Parry; Laurent Pueyo; Emily L. Rice; Jennifer E. Roberts; Lewis C. Roberts; M. Shao; Anand Sivaramakrishnan; Rémi Soummer; Tuan Truong; Gautam Vasisht; Aaron Veicht; Fred E. Vescelus; James K. Wallace

We obtained spectra in the wavelength range λ = 995-1769 nm of all four known planets orbiting the star HR 8799. Using the suite of instrumentation known as Project 1640 on the Palomar 5 m Hale Telescope, we acquired data at two epochs. This allowed for multiple imaging detections of the companions and multiple extractions of low-resolution (R ~ 35) spectra. Data reduction employed two different methods of speckle suppression and spectrum extraction, both yielding results that agree. The spectra do not directly correspond to those of any known objects, although similarities with L and T dwarfs are present, as well as some characteristics similar to planets such as Saturn. We tentatively identify the presence of CH_4 along with NH_3 and/or C_2H_2, and possibly CO_2 or HCN in varying amounts in each component of the system. Other studies suggested red colors for these faint companions, and our data confirm those observations. Cloudy models, based on previous photometric observations, may provide the best explanation for the new data presented here. Notable in our data is that these presumably co-eval objects of similar luminosity have significantly different spectra; the diversity of planets may be greater than previously thought. The techniques and methods employed in this paper represent a new capability to observe and rapidly characterize exoplanetary systems in a routine manner over a broad range of planet masses and separations. These are the first simultaneous spectroscopic observations of multiple planets in a planetary system other than our own.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

RECONNAISSANCE OF THE HR 8799 EXOSOLAR SYSTEM. II. ASTROMETRY AND ORBITAL MOTION

Laurent Pueyo; Rémi Soummer; J. Hoffmann; Rebecca Oppenheimer; James R. Graham; Neil Zimmerman; Chengxing Zhai; James K. Wallace; Fred E. Vescelus; Aaron Veicht; Gautam Vasisht; Tuan Truong; Anand Sivaramakrishnan; M. Shao; Lewis C. Roberts; Jennifer E. Roberts; Emily L. Rice; Ian R. Parry; Ricky Nilsson; Thomas G. Lockhart; E. R. Ligon; David A. King; Sasha Hinkley; Lynne A. Hillenbrand; David Hale; Richard G. Dekany; Justin R. Crepp; Eric Cady; Rick Burruss; Douglas Brenner

We present an analysis of the orbital motion of the four substellar objects orbiting HR 8799. Our study relies on the published astrometric history of this system augmented with an epoch obtained with the Project 1640 coronagraph with an integral field spectrograph (IFS) installed at the Palomar Hale telescope. We first focus on the intricacies associated with astrometric estimation using the combination of an extreme adaptive optics system (PALM-3000), a coronagraph, and an IFS. We introduce two new algorithms. The first one retrieves the stellar focal plane position when the star is occulted by a coronagraphic stop. The second one yields precise astrometric and spectrophotometric estimates of faint point sources even when they are initially buried in the speckle noise. The second part of our paper is devoted to studying orbital motion in this system. In order to complement the orbital architectures discussed in the literature, we determine an ensemble of likely Keplerian orbits for HR 8799bcde, using a Bayesian analysis with maximally vague priors regarding the overall configuration of the system. Although the astrometric history is currently too scarce to formally rule out coplanarity, HR 8799d appears to be misaligned with respect to the most likely planes of HR 8799bce orbits. This misalignment is sufficient to question the strictly coplanar assumption made by various authors when identifying a Laplace resonance as a potential architecture. Finally, we establish a high likelihood that HR 8799de have dynamical masses below 13 M_(Jup), using a loose dynamical survival argument based on geometric close encounters. We illustrate how future dynamical analyses will further constrain dynamical masses in the entire system.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

A CLOSE COMPANION SEARCH AROUND L DWARFS USING APERTURE MASKING INTERFEROMETRY AND PALOMAR LASER GUIDE STAR ADAPTIVE OPTICS

David Bernat; Antonin H. Bouchez; Michael J. Ireland; Peter G. Tuthill; Frantz Martinache; John Angione; Rick Burruss; John Cromer; Richard G. Dekany; Stephen R. Guiwits; John R. Henning; Jeff Hickey; Edward J. Kibblewhite; Daniel L. McKenna; Anna M. Moore; Harold L. Petrie; Jennifer E. Roberts; J. Chris Shelton; Robert P. Thicksten; Thang Trinh; Renu Tripathi; Mitchell Troy; Tuan Truong; Viswa Velur; James P. Lloyd

We present a close companion search around 16 known early L dwarfs using aperture masking interferometry with Palomar laser guide star adaptive optics (LGS AO). The use of aperture masking allows the detection of close binaries, corresponding to projected physical separations of 0.6-10.0 AU for the targets of our survey. This survey achieved median contrast limits of ΔK ~ 2.3 for separations between 1.2λ/D-4λ/D and ΔK ~ 1.4 at 2/3λ/D. We present four candidate binaries detected with moderate-to-high confidence (90%-98%). Two have projected physical separations less than 1.5 AU. This may indicate that tight-separation binaries contribute more significantly to the binary fraction than currently assumed, consistent with spectroscopic and photometric overluminosity studies. Ten targets of this survey have previously been observed with the Hubble Space Telescope as part of companion searches. We use the increased resolution of aperture masking to search for close or dim companions that would be obscured by full aperture imaging, finding two candidate binaries. This survey is the first application of aperture masking with LGS AO at Palomar. Several new techniques for the analysis of aperture masking data in the low signal-to-noise regime are explored.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Electric field conjugation with the project 1640 coronagraph

Eric Cady; Christoph Baranec; Charles A. Beichman; Douglas Brenner; Rick Burruss; Justin R. Crepp; Richard G. Dekany; David Hale; Lynne A. Hillenbrand; Sasha Hinkley; E. Robert Ligon; Thomas G. Lockhart; Ben R. Oppenheimer; Ian R. Parry; Laurent Pueyo; Emily L. Rice; Lewis C. Roberts; Jennifer E. Roberts; Michael Shao; Anand Sivaramakrishnan; Rémi Soummer; Hong Tang; Tuan Truong; Gautam Vasisht; Fred E. Vescelus; J. Kent Wallace; Chengxing Zhai; Neil Zimmerman

The Project 1640 instrument on the 200-inch Hale telescope at Palomar Observatory is a coronagraphic instru- ment with an integral eld spectrograph at the back end, designed to nd young, self-luminous planets around nearby stars. To reach the necessary contrast for this, the PALM-3000 adaptive optics system corrects for fast atmospheric speckles, while CAL, a phase-shifting interferometer in a Mach-Zehnder con guration, measures the quasistatic components of the complex electric eld in the pupil plane following the coronagraphic stop. Two additional sensors measure and control low-order modes. These eld measurements may then be combined with a system model and data taken separately using a white-light source internal to the AO system to correct for both phase and amplitude aberrations. Here, we discuss and demonstrate the procedure to maintain a half-plane dark hole in the image plane while the spectrograph is taking data, including initial on-sky performance.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

Facilitizing the Palomar AO laser guide star system

Jennifer E. Roberts; Antonin H. Bouchez; John Angione; Rick Burruss; John Cromer; Richard G. Dekany; Stephen R. Guiwits; John R. Henning; Jeff Hickey; Edward J. Kibblewhite; Daniel L. McKenna; Anna M. Moore; Harold L. Petrie; J. Chris Shelton; Robert P. Thicksten; Thang Trinh; Renu Tripathi; Mitchell Troy; Tuan Truong; Viswa Velur

We describe the work that has gone into taking the sodium Laser Guide Star (LGS) program on the Palomar AO system from a successful experiment to a facility instrument. In particular, we describe the operation of the system, the BTO (beam transfer optics) system which controls the path of the laser in the dome, the aircraft safety systems and the optical systems which allow us to take advantage of the unique properties of the macro/micro pulse laser. In addition we present on sky performance results that demonstrate K-band Strehl ratios of up to 48%


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

Real-time wavefront processors for the next generation of adaptive optics systems: a design and analysis

Tuan Truong; Gary L. Brack; Mitchell Troy; Thang Trinh; Fang Shi; Richard G. Dekany

Adaptive optics (AO) systems currently under investigation will require at least two orders of magitude increase in the number of actuators, which in turn translates to effectively a 104 increase in compute latency. Since the performance of an AO system invariably improves as the compute latency decreases, it is important to study how todays computer systems will scale to address this expected increase in actuator utilization. This paper answers this question by characterizing the performance of a single deformable mirror (DM) Shack-Hartmann natural guide star AO system implemented on the present-generation digital signal processor (DSP) TMS320C6701 from Texas Instruments. We derive the compute latency of such a system in terms of a few basic parameters, such as the number of DM actuators, the number of data channels used to read out the camera pixels, the number of DSPs, the available memory bandwidth, as well as the inter-processor communication (IPC) bandwidth and the pixel transfer rate. We show how the results would scale for future systems that utilizes multiple DMs and guide stars. We demonstrate that the principal performance bottleneck of such a system is the available memory bandwidth of the processors and to lesser extent the IPC bandwidth. This paper concludes with suggestions for mitigating this bottleneck.


Techniques and Instrumentation for Detection of Exoplanets VIII | 2017

Dynamic testbed demonstration of WFIRST coronagraph low order wavefront sensing and control (LOWFS/C)

Fang Shi; Xin An; Kunjithapatham Balasubramanian; Eric Cady; Brian Kern; Raymond Lam; David S. Marx; Camilo Mejia Prada; Dwight Moody; Keith Patterson; Ilya Y. Poberezhskiy; Byoung-Joon Seo; Joel Shields; Erkin Sidick; Hong Tang; John T. Trauger; Tuan Truong; Victor White; Daniel W. Wilson; Hanying Zhou

To maintain the required performance of WFIRST Coronagraph in a realistic space environment, a Low Order Wavefront Sensing and Control (LOWFS/C) subsystem is necessary. The LOWFS/C uses a Zernike wavefront sensor (ZWFS) with the phase shifting disk combined with the starlight rejecting occulting mask. For wavefront error corrections, WFIRST LOWFS/C uses a fast steering mirror (FSM) for line-of-sight (LoS) correction, a focusing mirror for focus drift correction, and one of the two deformable mirrors (DM) for other low order wavefront error (WFE) correction. As a part of technology development and demonstration for WFIRST Coronagraph, a dedicated Occulting Mask Coronagraph (OMC) testbed has been built and commissioned. With its configuration similar to the WFIRST flight coronagraph instrument the OMC testbed consists of two coronagraph modes, Shaped Pupil Coronagraph (SPC) and Hybrid Lyot Coronagraph (HLC), a low order wavefront sensor (LOWFS), and an optical telescope assembly (OTA) simulator which can generate realistic LoS drift and jitter as well as low order wavefront error that would be induced by the WFIRST telescope’s vibration and thermal changes. In this paper, we will introduce the concept of WFIRST LOWFS/C, describe the OMC testbed, and present the testbed results of LOWFS sensor performance. We will also present our recent results from the dynamic coronagraph tests in which we have demonstrated of using LOWFS/C to maintain the coronagraph contrast with the presence of WFIRST-like line-of-sight and low order wavefront disturbances.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2015

Low order wavefront sensing and control for WFIRST-AFTA coronagraph

Fang Shi; Kunjithapatham Balasubramanian; Randall D. Bartos; Randall Hein; Brian Kern; John E. Krist; Raymond K. Lam; Douglas K. Moore; James D. Moore; Keith Patterson; Ilya Poberezhskiy; Joel Shields; Erkin Sidick; Hong Tang; Tuan Truong; Kent Wallace; Xu Wang; Dan Wilson

To maintain the required WFIRST Coronagraph starlight suppression performance in a realistic space environment, a low order wavefront sensing and control (LOWFS/C) subsystem is necessary. The LOWFS/C uses the rejected stellar light from coronagraph to sense and suppress the telescope pointing drift and jitter as well as the low order wavefront errors due to changes in thermal loading on the telescope and the rest of the observatory. In this paper we will present an overview of the low order wavefront sensing and control subsystem for the WFIRST Coronagraph. We will describe LOWFS/C’s Zernike wavefront sensor concept and control design, and present an overview of sensing performance analysis and modeling, predicted line-of-sight jitter suppression loop performance, as well as the low order wavefront error correction with the coronagraph’s deformable mirror. We will also report the LOWFS/C testbed design and the preliminary in-air test results, which show promising performance of the Zernike wavefront sensor and FSM feedback loop.


Optics Letters | 2015

On-sky demonstration of optimal control for adaptive optics at Palomar Observatory.

Jonathan Tesch; Tuan Truong; Rick Burruss; Steve Gibson

High-order adaptive optics systems often suffer from significant computational latency, which ultimately limits the temporal error rejection bandwidth when classical controllers are employed. This Letter presents results from an on-sky, real-time implementation of an optimal controller on the PALM-3000 adaptive optics system at Palomar Observatory. The optimal controller is computed directly from open-loop wavefront measurements using a multichannel subspace system identification algorithm, and mitigates latency by explicitly predicting incident turbulence. Experimental results show a significant reduction in the residual wavefront error over the controlled spatial modes, illustrating the superior performance of the optimal control approach versus the nominal integral control architecture.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

Performance of the optical communication adaptive optics testbed

Jennifer E. Roberts; Mitchell Troy; Malcolm W. Wright; Stephen R. Guiwits; Siddarayappa Bikkannavar; Gary L. Brack; Vachik Garkanian; Dean L. Palmer; Benjamin Platt; Tuan Truong; Kent Wallace; Keith E. Wilson

We describe the current performance of an adaptive optics testbed for free space optical communication. This adaptive optics system allows for simulation of night and day-time observing on a 1 meter telescope with a 97 actuator deformable mirror. In lab-generated seeing of 2.1 arcseconds (at 0.5μm) the system achieves a Strehl of 21% at 1.064μm (210nm RMS wavefront). Predictions of the systems performance based on real-time wavefront sensor telemetry data and analytical equations are shown to agree with the observed image performance. We present experimentally measured gains in communications performance of 2-4dB in the received signal power when AO correction is applied in the presence of high background and turbulence at an uncoded bit error rate of 0.1. The data source was a 100Mbps on-offkeyed signal detected with an IR-enhanced avalanche photodiode detector as the receiver.

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Rick Burruss

California Institute of Technology

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Richard G. Dekany

California Institute of Technology

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Mitchell Troy

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Christoph Baranec

California Institute of Technology

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David Hale

California Institute of Technology

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Thang Trinh

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Eric Cady

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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John Angione

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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