Filtration of atmospheric noise in narrow-field astrometry with very large telescopes

This paper presents a non-classic approach to narrow field astrometry that offers a significant improvement over conventional techniques due to enhanced reduction of atmospheric image motion. The method is based on two key elements: apodization of the entrance pupil and the enhanced virtual symmetry...

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Veröffentlicht in:Astronomy and astrophysics (Berlin) 2004-12, Vol.427 (3), p.1127-1143
Hauptverfasser: LAZORENKO, P. F, LAZORENKO, G. A
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description This paper presents a non-classic approach to narrow field astrometry that offers a significant improvement over conventional techniques due to enhanced reduction of atmospheric image motion. The method is based on two key elements: apodization of the entrance pupil and the enhanced virtual symmetry of reference stars. Symmetrization is implemented by setting special weights to each reference star. Thus a reference field itself forms a virtual net filter that effectively attenuates the image motion spectrum. Atmospheric positional error was found to follow a power dependency Delta similar to R super(k mu /2) D super(-k/2+1/3) on angular field size R and aperture D; here k is some optional even integer 2 less than or equal to k less than or equal to square root 8N + 1 - 1 limited by a number N of reference stars, and mu less than or equal to 1 is a term dependent on k and the magnitude and sky star distribution in the field. As compared to conventional techniques for which k = 2, the improvement in accuracy increases by some orders. Limitations to astrometric performance of monopupil large ground-based telescopes are estimated. The total atmospheric and photon noise for at a 10 m telescope at good 0.4" seeing was found to be, depending on sky star density, 10 to 60 mu as per 10 min exposure in R band. For a 100 m telescope and FWHM = 0.1" (low-order adaptive optics corrections) the potential accuracy is 0.2 to 2 mu as.
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title Filtration of atmospheric noise in narrow-field astrometry with very large telescopes
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