GeminiFocus 2015 Year in Review | Page 48

April 2015 Gaetano Sivo, Vincent Garrel, Rodrigo Carrasco, Markus Hartung, Eduardo Marin, Vanessa Montes, and Chad Trujillo News in Adaptive Optics at Gemini South Adaptive optics (AO) activities conducted at Gemini South have not only improved image quality but also resulted in some exciting science obtained with the Gemini Multi-conjugate adaptive optics System (GeMS) coupled with the Gemini South Adaptive Optics Imager. Future AO activities are expected to expand dramatically at Gemini South once the Natural Guide Star system for GeMS is upgraded and a more reliable laser is installed. Adaptive optics systems rely on laser guide star wavefront sensors (LGSWFS) for high-order measurements of distortions to starlight caused by Earth’s atmosphere. Of course precise alignment of the system is critical for optimal performance. During the winter (Southern Hemisphere) telescope shutdown of 2013, the AO group decided to realign the CCD and lenslets assembly of the LGSWFS; we had calculated that the system’s collimator and lenslets were offset by 1.8 centimeters, which corresponds to a misconjugation of about 51 (km) on the sky. A Puzzling Image Quality Issue with Canopus Post shutdown, the laser beacon showed a Rayleigh pattern on the LGSWFS that appeared physically impossible. This first led the AO team to believe that a pixel was swapped inside a quadcell subaperture used to center the laser beam to a certain spot. Even if this were the case, the reconfiguration of the WFS introduced unwanted side effects, so the AO team reverted very quickly to the original configuration, which required two additional days of work on the telescope. 46 GeminiFocus 2015 Year in Review January 2016