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Optical Scientists Design Method for Making Smaller Telescopes More Like Larger Ones

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December 1, 2011

Optical scientists designed a way to help small telescopes create sharper images. Because so many elements in the atmosphere, such as cloud cover, can interfere with your view of the night sky, scientists came up with a method that counters those effects. The method uses a system of lasers and cameras to indicate to a computer what shape the mirror should be to achieve a clearer view.

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Science Insider

HOW LASERS WORK: "Laser" is an acronym for Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. It describes any device that creates and amplifies a narrow, focused beam of light whose photons are all traveling in the same direction, rather than emitting every which way at once. Lasers can be configured to emit many different colors in the spectrum, but each laser can emit only that one color. There are many different types of laser, but all of them have an empty cavity containing a lasing medium: either a crystal like ruby or garnet, or a gas or liquid. There are two mirrors on either end of the cavity, one of which is half-silvered, meaning that it will reflect some light and let some light through. In a laser, the atoms or molecules of the lasing medium are "pumped" by applying intense flashes of light or electricity. The end result is a sudden burst of so-called "coherent" light as all the atoms discharge in a rapid chain reaction.

The Optical Society of America contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.

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Robo-AO: autonomous and replicable laser-adaptive-optics for meter-class telescopes

To Go Inside This Science

Christoph Baranec
Senior Postdoctoral Scholar in Astronomy
Caltech Optical Observatories
California Institute of Technology

Optical Society of America
202-223-8130
info@osa.org