Astronomical seeing

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Schematic diagram illustrating how optical wavefronts from a distant star may be perturbed by a turbulent layer in the atmosphere. The vertical scale of the wavefronts plotted is highly exaggerated.
Schematic diagram illustrating how optical wavefronts from a distant star may be perturbed by a turbulent layer in the atmosphere. The vertical scale of the wavefronts plotted is highly exaggerated.

Astronomical seeing refers to the blurring and twinkling of astronomical objects such as stars caused by turbulence in the Earth's atmosphere. The astronomical seeing conditions on a given night at a given location describe how much the Earth's atmosphere perturbs the images of stars as seen through a telescope. The most common seeing measurement is the diameter (technically full width at half maximum or FWHM) of the seeing disc (the point spread function for imaging through the atmosphere). The point spread function diameter (seeing disc diameter or "seeing") is a reference to the best possible angular resolution which can be achieved by an optical telescope in a long photographic exposure, and corresponds to the diameter of the fuzzy blob seen when observing a point-like star through the atmosphere. The size of the seeing disc is determined by the astronomical seeing conditions at the time of the observation. The best conditions give a seeing disk diameter of ~0.4 arcseconds and are found at high-altitude observatories on small islands such as Mauna Kea or La Palma. A detailed description of the seeing disc can be found in the FWHM of the seeing disc subsection of the following article.

Seeing is one of the biggest problems for Earth-based astronomy: while the big telescopes have theoretically milli-arcsecond resolution, the real image will never be better than the average seeing disc during the observation. This can easily mean a factor of 100 between the potential and practical resolution.

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[edit] The effects of astronomical seeing

Astronomical seeing has several effects:

  1. It causes the images of point sources (such as stars) to break up into speckle patterns, which change very rapidly with time (the resulting speckled images can be processed using speckle imaging)
  2. Long exposure images of these changing speckle patterns result in a blurred image of the point source, called a seeing disc
  3. The brightness of stars appears to fluctuate in a process known as scintillation or twinkling
  4. Atmospheric seeing causes the fringes in an astronomical interferometer to move rapidly
  5. The distribution of atmospheric seeing through the atmosphere (the CN2 profile described below) causes the image quality in adaptive optics systems to degrade the further you look from the location of reference star

The effects of atmospheric seeing were indirectly responsible for the belief that there were canals on Mars. In viewing a bright object such as Mars, occasionally a still patch of air will come in front of the planet, resulting in a brief moment of clarity. Before the use of charge-coupled devices, there was no way of recording the image of the planet in the brief moment other than having the observer remember the image and draw it later. This had the effect of having the image of the planet be dependent on the observer's memory and preconceptions which led the belief that Mars had linear features.

The effects of atmospheric seeing are qualitatively similar throughout the visible and near infra-red wavebands. At large telescopes the long exposure image resolution is generally slightly higher at longer wavelengths, and the timescale (t0 - see below) for the changes in the dancing speckle patterns is substantially lower.

[edit] Measures of astronomical seeing

There are three common descriptions of the astronomical seeing conditions at an observatory:

  1. The FWHM of the seeing disc
  2. r0 and t0
  3. The CN2 profile

These are described in the sub-sections below:

[edit] The full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the seeing disc

Without an atmosphere, a small star would have an apparent size in a telescope image determined by diffraction and would be inversely proportional to the diameter of the telescope. However when light enters the Earth's atmosphere, the different temperature layers and different wind speeds distort the light waves leading to distortions in the image of a star. The effects of the atmosphere can be modelled as rotating cells of air moving turbulently. At most observatories the turbulence is only significant on scales larger than r0 (see below—the seeing parameter r0 is 10–20 cm at visible wavelengths under the best conditions) and this limits the resolution of telescopes to be about the same as given by a space-based 10–20 cm telescope.

The distortion changes at a high rate, typically more frequently than 100 times a second. In a typical astronomical image of a star with an exposure time of seconds or even minutes, the different distortions average out as a filled disc called the point spread function or "seeing disc". The diameter of the seeing disk, most often defined as the full width at half maximum (FWHM), is a measure of the astronomical seeing conditions.

It follows from this definition that seeing is always a variable quantity, different from place to place, from night to night and even variable on a scale of minutes. Astronomers often talk about "good" nights with a low average seeing disc diameter, and "bad" nights where the seeing diameter was so high that all observations were worthless.

The FWHM of the seeing disc (or just Seeing) is usually measured in arcseconds, abbreviated with the symbol ("). A 1.0" seeing is a good one for average astronomical sites. The seeing of an urban environment is usually much worse. Good seeing nights tend to be clear, cold nights without wind gusts. Warm air rises (convection) degrading the seeing as does wind and clouds. At the best high-altitude mountaintop observatories the wind brings in stable air which has not previously been in contact with the ground, sometimes providing seeing as good as 0.4".

[edit] r0 and t0

The astronomical seeing conditions at an observatory can be well described by the parameters r0 and t0. For telescopes with diameters smaller than r0, the resolution of long-exposure images is inversely proportional to the telescope diameter. For telescopes with diameters larger than r0, the image resolution is independent of telescope diameter, remaining constant at the value given by a telescope of diameter equal to r0. r0 also corresponds to the length-scale over which the turbulence becomes significant (10-20 cm at visible wavelengths at good observatories), and t0 corresponds to the time-scale over which the changes in the turbulence become significant. r0 determines the spacing of the actuators needed in an adaptive optics system, and t0 determines the correction speed required to compensate for the effects of the atmosphere.

r0 and t0 vary with the wavelength used for the astronomical imaging, allowing slightly higher resolution imaging at longer wavelengths using large telescopes.

r0 is often known as the Fried parameter (pronounced freed), named after David L. Fried.

[edit] Mathematical description of r0 and t0

Simulated negative image showing what a single (point-like) star would look like through a ground-based telescope with a diameter of 2r0. Diffraction makes the image appear blurred. The atmosphere would make the blob move around very rapidly, so that in a long-exposure photograph it would appear more blurred.
Simulated negative image showing what a single (point-like) star would look like through a ground-based telescope with a diameter of 2r0. Diffraction makes the image appear blurred. The atmosphere would make the blob move around very rapidly, so that in a long-exposure photograph it would appear more blurred.
Simulated negative image showing what a single (point-like) star would look like through a ground-based telescope with a diameter of 7r0, on the same angular scale as the 2r0 image above. The atmosphere makes the image break up into several blobs (speckles). The speckles move around very rapidly, so that in a long-exposure photograph the star would appear as a single blurred blob.
Simulated negative image showing what a single (point-like) star would look like through a ground-based telescope with a diameter of 7r0, on the same angular scale as the 2r0 image above. The atmosphere makes the image break up into several blobs (speckles). The speckles move around very rapidly, so that in a long-exposure photograph the star would appear as a single blurred blob.
Simulated negative image showing what a single (point-like) star would look like through a ground-based telescope with a diameter of 20r0. The atmosphere makes the image break up into several blobs (speckles). The speckles move around very rapidly, so that in a long-exposure photograph the star would appear as a single blurred blob.
Simulated negative image showing what a single (point-like) star would look like through a ground-based telescope with a diameter of 20r0. The atmosphere makes the image break up into several blobs (speckles). The speckles move around very rapidly, so that in a long-exposure photograph the star would appear as a single blurred blob.

Mathematical models can give an accurate model of the effects of astronomical seeing on images taken through ground-based telescopes. Three simulated short-exposure images are shown at the right through three different telescope diameters (as negative images to highlight the fainter features more clearly -- a common astronomical convention). The telescope diameters are quoted in terms of the Fried parameter r0 (defined below). r0 is a commonly used measurement of the astronomical seeing at observatories. At visible wavelengths, r0 varies from 20 cm at the best locations to 5 cm at typical sea-level sites.

In reality the pattern of blobs (speckles) in the images changes very rapidly, so that long exposure photographs would just show a single large blurred blob in the centre for each telescope diameter. The diameter (FWHM) of the large blurred blob in long exposure images is called the seeing disc diameter, and is independent of the telescope diameter used (as long as adaptive optics correction is not applied).

It is first useful to give a brief overview of the basic theory of optical propagation through the atmosphere. In the standard classical theory, light is treated as an oscillation in a field ψ. For monochromatic plane waves arriving from a distant point source with wave-vector \mathbf{k}: \psi_{0} \left(\mathbf{r},t\right)  = A_{u}e^{i\left (\phi_{u} + 2\pi\nu t + \mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{r} \right )} where ψ0 is the complex field at position \mathbf{r} and time t, with real and imaginary parts corresponding to the electric and magnetic field components, φu represents a phase offset, ν is the frequency of the light determined by \nu=c\left | \mathbf{k} \right | / \left ( 2 \pi \right ), and Au is the amplitude of the light.

The photon flux in this case is proportional to the square of the amplitude Au, and the optical phase corresponds to the complex argument of ψ0. As wavefronts pass through the Earth's atmosphere they may be perturbed by refractive index variations in the atmosphere. The diagram at the top-right of this page shows schematically a turbulent layer in the Earth's atmosphere perturbing planar wavefronts before they enter a telescope. The perturbed wavefront ψp may be related at any given instant to the original planar wavefront \psi_{0} \left(\mathbf{r}\right) in the following way: \psi_{p} \left(\mathbf{r}\right) = \left ( \chi_{a} \left(\mathbf{r}\right) e^{i\phi_{a} \left(\mathbf{r}\right)}\right ) \psi_{0} \left(\mathbf{r}\right)

where \chi_{a} \left(\mathbf{r}\right) represents the fractional change in wavefront amplitude and \phi_{a} \left(\mathbf{r}\right) is the change in wavefront phase introduced by the atmosphere. It is important to emphasise that \chi_{a} \left(\mathbf{r}\right) and \phi_{a} \left(\mathbf{r}\right) describe the effect of the Earth's atmosphere, and the timescales for any changes in these functions will be set by the speed of refractive index fluctuations in the atmosphere.

[edit] The Kolmogorov model of turbulence

A description of the nature of the wavefront perturbations introduced by the atmosphere is provided by the Kolmogorov model developed by Tatarski (1961), based partly on the studies of turbulence by the Russian mathematician Andreï Kolmogorov (see references below by Kolmogorov). This model is supported by a variety of experimental measurements (see e.g. references below by Buscher et al 1995, Nightingale and Buscher 1991, O’Byrne 1988, Colavita et al 1987) and is widely used in simulations of astronomical imaging. The model assumes that the wavefront perturbations are brought about by variations in the refractive index of the atmosphere. These refractive index variations lead directly to phase fluctuations described by \phi_{a} \left(\mathbf{r}\right), but any amplitude fluctuations are only brought about as a second-order effect while the perturbed wavefronts propagate from the perturbing atmospheric layer to the telescope. For all reasonable models of the Earth's atmosphere at optical and infra-red wavelengths the instantaneous imaging performance is dominated by the phase fluctuations \phi_{a} \left(\mathbf{r}\right). The amplitude fluctuations described by \chi_{a} \left(\mathbf{r}\right) have negligible effect on the structure of the images seen in the focus of a large telescope.

The phase fluctuations in Tatarski's model are usually assumed to have a Gaussian random distribution with the following second order structure function: D_{\phi_{a}}\left(\mathbf{\rho} \right) = \left \langle \left | \phi_{a} \left ( \mathbf{r} \right ) - \phi_{a} \left ( \mathbf{r} + \mathbf{\rho} \right ) \right | ^{2} \right \rangle _{\mathbf{r}}

where D_{\phi_{a}} \left ({\mathbf{\rho}} \right ) is the atmospherically induced variance between the phase at two parts of the wavefront separated by a distance \mathbf{\rho} in the aperture plane, and < ... > represents the ensemble average.

The structure function of Tatarski (1961) can be described in terms of a single parameter r0:

D_{\phi_{a}} \left ({\mathbf{\rho}} \right ) = 6.88 \left ( \frac{\left | \mathbf{\rho} \right |}{r_{0}} \right ) ^{5/3}

r0 indicates the strength of the phase fluctuations as it corresponds to the diameter of a circular telescope aperture at which atmospheric phase perturbations begin to seriously limit the image resolution. Typical r0 values for I band (900 nm wavelength) observations at good sites are 20---40 cm. Fried (1965) and Noll (1976) noted that r0 also corresponds to the aperture diameter for which the variance σ2 of the wavefront phase averaged over the aperture comes approximately to unity: \sigma ^{2}=1.0299 \left ( \frac{d}{r_{0}} \right )^{5/3}

This equation represents a commonly used definition for r0, a parameter frequently used to describe the atmospheric conditions at astronomical observatories.

r0 can be determined from a measured CN2 profile (described below) as follows:

r_{0}=\left ( 16.7\lambda^{-2}( \cos \gamma )^{-1}\int_{0}^{\infty}dh C_{N}^{2}(h) \right )^{-3/5}

where the turbulence strength C_{N}^{2}(h) varies as a function of height h above the telescope, and γ is the angular distance of the astronomical source from the zenith (from directly overhead).

The timescale t0 is simply proportional to r0 divided by the mean wind speed.

Astronomical observatories are generally situated on mountaintops, as the air at ground level is usually more convective. A light wind bringing stable air from high above the clouds and ocean generally provides the best seeing conditions (telescope shown: NOT).
Astronomical observatories are generally situated on mountaintops, as the air at ground level is usually more convective. A light wind bringing stable air from high above the clouds and ocean generally provides the best seeing conditions (telescope shown: NOT).

[edit] The CN2 profile

A more thorough description of the astronomical seeing at an observatory is given by producing a profile of the turbulence strength as a function of altitude, called a CN2 profile. CN2 profiles are generally performed when deciding on the type of adaptive optics system which will be needed at a particular telescope, or in deciding whether or not a particular location would be a good site for setting up a new astronomical observatory. Typically, several methods are used simultaneously for measuring the CN2 profile and then compared. Some of the most common methods include:

  1. SCIDAR (imaging the shadow patterns in the scintillation of starlight)
  2. LOLAS (a small aperture variant of SCIDAR designed for low-altitude profiling)
  3. SLODAR
  4. RADAR mapping of turbulence
  5. Balloon-borne thermometers to measure how quickly the air temperature is fluctuating with time due to turbulence

There are also mathematical functions describing the CN2 profile. Some are empirical fits from measured data and others attempt to incorporate elements of theory. One common model for continental land masses is known as Hufnagel-Valley after two workers in this subject.

[edit] Overcoming atmospheric seeing

An animated image of the Moon's surface showing the effects of Earth's atmosphere on the view
An animated image of the Moon's surface showing the effects of Earth's atmosphere on the view

The first answer to this problem was speckle imaging, which allowed bright objects to be observed with very high resolution. Later came NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, working outside the atmosphere and thus not have any seeing problems and allowing observations of faint targets for the first time (although with poorer resolution than speckle observations of bright sources from ground-based telescopes because of Hubble's smaller telescope diameter). The highest resolution visible and infrared images currently come from imaging optical interferometers such as the Navy Prototype Optical Interferometer or Cambridge Optical Aperture Synthesis Telescope.

Starting in the 1990s, many telescopes have begun to develop adaptive optics systems that partially solve the seeing problem, but none of the systems so far built or designed completely removes the atmosphere effect, and observations are usually limited to a small region of the sky surrounding relatively bright stars.

A more recently implemented and much cheaper technique Lucky Imaging has had very good results. This idea dates back to Fried in 1978. Basically this technique relies on the fact that every so often the sky will momentarily be clear, and hence by recording large numbers of images in real-time, a 'lucky' excellent image can be picked out. This technique can outperform adaptive optics in many cases and is even accessible to amateurs. It does, however, require a longer observation time for imaging faint targets than adaptive optics.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

Much of the above text is taken (with permission) from Lucky Exposures: Diffraction limited astronomical imaging through the atmosphere, by Robert Nigel Tubbs

[edit] External links