Adaptive Optics and Lucky Imager (AOLI): presentation and first light
astro-ph.IM
/ Authors
S. Velasco, R. Rebolo, C. Mackay, A. Oscoz, D. L. King, J. Crass, A. Díaz-Sánchez, B. Femenía, V. González-Escalera, L. Labadie
and 5 more authors
R. L. López, A. Pérez Garrido, M. Puga, L. F. Rodríguez-Ramos, J. Zuther
/ Abstract
In this paper we present the Adaptive Optics Lucky Imager (AOLI), a state-of-the-art instrument which makes use of two well proved techniques for extremely high spatial resolution with ground-based telescopes: Lucky Imaging (LI) and Adaptive Optics (AO). AOLI comprises an AO system, including a low order non-linear curvature wavefront sensor together with a 241 actuators deformable mirror, a science array of four 1024x1024 EMCCDs, allowing a 120x120 down to 36x36 arcseconds field of view, a calibration subsystem and a powerful LI software. Thanks to the revolutionary WFS, AOLI shall have the capability of using faint reference stars ({\it I\/} $\sim$ 16.5-17.5), enabling it to be used over a much wider part of the sky than with common Shack-Hartmann AO systems. This instrument saw first light in September 2013 at William Herschel Telescope. Although the instrument was not complete, these commissioning demonstrated its feasibility, obtaining a FWHM for the best PSF of 0.151$\pm$0.005 arcsec and a plate scale of 55.0$\pm$0.3 mas/pixel. Those observations served us to prove some characteristics of the interesting multiple T Tauri system LkH$α$ 262-263, finding it to be gravitationally bounded. This interesting multiple system mixes the presence of proto-planetary discs, one proved to be double, and the first-time optically resolved pair LkH$α$ 263AB (0.42 arcsec separation).