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SPACE SCOPES
First Light of New Laser at Paranal
by Staff Writers
Munich, Germany (SPX) May 14, 2015


The 4 Laser Guide Star Facility (4LGSF) team have achieved first light with the first of four laser guide star units on Unit Telescope 4 (UT4) of ESO's Very Large Telescope at Paranal. This is a key step on the way to creating the full Adaptive Optics Facility. First light took place on the night of Wednesday 29 April 2015 and this picture shows the laser being launched into the night sky. Image courtesy J. Girard/ESO. For a larger version of this image please go here.

The 4 Laser Guide Star Facility (4LGSF) team have achieved first light with the first of four laser guide star units on Unit Telescope 4 (UT4) of ESO's Very Large Telescope at Paranal. This is a key step on the way to creating the full Adaptive Optics Facility.

One of the first images of the 22-watt laser being launched, taken by the Laser Pointing Camera (LPC), shows the intense orange beam pointed at a globular cluster. Another LPC image shows the laser pointed close to the planet Saturn.

The Adaptive Optics Facility uses sensors to analyse the atmospheric turbulence and a deformable mirror integrated in the telescope to correct for the image distortions caused by the atmosphere. But several bright point-like stars needs to be at hand in order to correct for the effects of turbulence, and these need to be very close to the science target in the sky.

Finding multiple natural stars for this role is unlikely. So, to make correcting for the atmospheric turbulence possible everywhere in the sky, for all possible science targets, powerful laser beams are projected into the sky. When the beams interact with the sodium layer high in the atmosphere they create artificial stars.

By measuring the atmospherically induced motions and distortions of these artificial stars, and making minute adjustments to the deformable secondary mirror, the telescope can produce images with much greater sharpness than is possible without adaptive optics.

When completed in 2016, the Adaptive Optics Facility will see the UT4 telescope become a fully adaptive telescope providing turbulence-corrected images for all its instruments, without the addition of adaptive modules and supplementary optics. The concept is more far-reaching than just installing a deformable secondary mirror since the telescope instruments have also been optimised to benefit from this upgrade.

In the future three further laser artificial guide stars will be installed in addition to the one that just saw first light. This will allow the atmospheric turbulence to be mapped in greater detail and will allow the telescope to produce even better images.


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Related Links
4 Laser Guide Star Facility at ESO
Space Telescope News and Technology at Skynightly.com






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SPACE SCOPES
15 million euro boost for European astronomy
Dwingeloo, Netherlands (SPX) May 09, 2015
Astronomers and astroparticle physicists today are celebrating a 15 million euro EU funding boost European telescopes with the launch of the ASTERICS project, which will help solve the Big Data challenges of European astronomy and give members of the public direct interactive access to some of the best of Europe's astronomy images and data. Astronomy is experiencing a surge of data from it ... read more


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