Paper
21 July 2014 Real-time control for the high order, wide field DRAGON AO test bench
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
DRAGON is a high order, wide field AO test-bench at Durham. A key feature of DRAGON is the ability to be operated at real-time rates, i.e. frame rates of up to 1kHz, with low latency to maintain AO performance. Here, we will present the real-time control architecture for DRAGON, which includes two deformable mirrors, eight wavefront sensors and thousands of Shack-Hartmann sub-apertures. A novel approach has been taken to allow access to the wavefront sensor pixel stream, reducing latency and peak computational load, and this technique can be implemented for other similar wavefront sensor cameras with no hardware costs. We report on experience with an ELT-suitable wavefront sensor camera. DRAGON will form the basis for investigations into hardware acceleration architectures for AO real-time control, and recent work on GPU and many-core systems (including the Xeon Phi) will be reported. Additionally, the modular structure of DRAGON, its remote control capabilities, distribution of AO telemetry data, and the software concepts and architecture will be reported. Techniques used in DRAGON for pixel processing, slope calculation and wavefront reconstruction will be presented. This will include methods to handle changes in CN2 profile and sodium layer profile, both of which can be modelled in DRAGON. DRAGON software simulation techniques linking hardware-in-the-loop computer models to the DRAGON real-time system and control software will also be discussed. This tool allows testing of the DRAGON system without requiring physical hardware and serves as a test-bed for ELT integration and verification techniques.
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Alastair Basden, Nazim Ali Bharmal, Urban Bitenc, Nigel Dipper, Tim Morris, Richard Myers, Andrew Reeves, and Eddy Younger "Real-time control for the high order, wide field DRAGON AO test bench", Proc. SPIE 9148, Adaptive Optics Systems IV, 91484F (21 July 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2055873
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Adaptive optics

Cameras

Control systems

Real-time computing

Wavefront sensors

Algorithm development

Calibration

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