IMAIApr 23, 2025

Fried Parameter Estimation from Single Wavefront Sensor Image with Artificial Neural Networks

arXiv:2504.17029v11 citationsh-index: 14Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
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This provides a real-time, data-driven solution for optimizing adaptive optics in astronomical telescopes and free space optical communications, though it appears incremental as it adapts existing machine learning methods to a specific domain.

The paper tackles the problem of estimating the Fried parameter (r0) from a single wavefront sensor image to characterize atmospheric turbulence for adaptive optics systems, achieving accurate estimates to within a few millimeters and inference times of 0.83ms on standard GPU hardware.

Atmospheric turbulence degrades the quality of astronomical observations in ground-based telescopes, leading to distorted and blurry images. Adaptive Optics (AO) systems are designed to counteract these effects, using atmospheric measurements captured by a wavefront sensor to make real-time corrections to the incoming wavefront. The Fried parameter, r0, characterises the strength of atmospheric turbulence and is an essential control parameter for optimising the performance of AO systems and more recently sky profiling for Free Space Optical (FSO) communication channels. In this paper, we develop a novel data-driven approach, adapting machine learning methods from computer vision for Fried parameter estimation from a single Shack-Hartmann or pyramid wavefront sensor image. Using these data-driven methods, we present a detailed simulation-based evaluation of our approach using the open-source COMPASS AO simulation tool to evaluate both the Shack-Hartmann and pyramid wavefront sensors. Our evaluation is over a range of guide star magnitudes, and realistic noise, atmospheric and instrument conditions. Remarkably, we are able to develop a single network-based estimator that is accurate in both open and closed-loop AO configurations. Our method accurately estimates the Fried parameter from a single WFS image directly from AO telemetry to a few millimetres. Our approach is suitable for real time control, exhibiting 0.83ms r0 inference times on retail NVIDIA RTX 3090 GPU hardware, and thereby demonstrating a compelling economic solution for use in real-time instrument control.

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