Author:
Allured Ryan,Ashcom Jonathan B.,Chapnik Philip
Abstract
Optical interferometry is a technique capable of achieving better
spatial resolution than the world’s largest monolithic telescopes at a
fraction of the cost. Most interferometer architectures split the
imaging bandwidth into a number of channels in order to prevent image
degradation due to a large spectral bandwidth. An optical
hypertelescope permits a much broader spectral bandwidth on a single
channel than a conventional interferometer. However, a broader
spectral bandwidth becomes more sensitive to differential chromatic
dispersion, and this dispersion must be measured and corrected in
order to maintain a high signal-to-noise ratio. A prototype dispersion
measurement system is presented that is capable of measuring chromatic
dispersion in an eight aperture hypertelescope. The optical design,
calibration, data acquisition, and dispersion measurement process are
described in detail. This system is capable of measuring differential
dispersion to better than λ/100RMS and is scalable to a system with an
order of magnitude more apertures.
Funder
Intelligence Advanced Research Projects
Activity
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Engineering (miscellaneous),Electrical and Electronic Engineering