End-to-end simulations of photonic phase correctors for adaptive optics systems Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • Optical beams and starlight distorted by atmospheric turbulence can be corrected with adaptive optics systems to enable efficient coupling into single-mode fibers. Deformable mirrors, used to flatten the wavefront in astronomical telescopes, are costly, sensitive, and complex mechanical components that require careful calibration to enable high-quality imaging in astronomy, microscopy, and vision science. They are also impractical to deploy in large numbers for non-imaging applications like free-space optical communication. Here, we propose a photonic integrated circuit capable of spatially sampling the wavefront collected by the telescope and co-phasing the subapertures to maximize the flux delivered to an output single-mode fiber as the integrated photonic implementation of a deformable mirror. We present the results of end-to-end simulations to quantify the performance of the proposed photonic solution under varying atmospheric conditions toward realizing an adaptive optics system without a deformable mirror for free-space optical receivers.

authors

  • Patel, Dhwanil
  • Diab, Momen
  • Cheriton, Ross
  • Taylor, Jacob
  • Rojas, Libertad
  • Vachon, Martin
  • Xu, Dan-Xia
  • Schmid, Jens H
  • Cheben, Pavel
  • Janz, Siegfried
  • Sivanandam, Suresh

publication date

  • July 29, 2024