Measurement Error of Shack-Hartmann Wavefront Sensor

2012 
A Shack-Hartmann sensor is one of the most important and popular wavefront sensors used in an adaptive optics system to measure the aberrations caused by either atmospheric turbulence, laser transmission, or the living eye [1-7]. Its design was based on an aperture array that was developed in 1900 by Johannes Franz Hartmann as a means to trace individual rays of light through the optical system of a large telescope, thereby testing the quality of the image.[8] In the late 1960s Roland Shack and Platt modified the Hartmann screen by replacing the apertures in an opaque screen by an array of lenslets [9-10]. The terminology as proposed by Shack and Platt was “Hartmann-screen”. The fundamental principle seems to be documented even before Huygens by the Jesuit philosopher, Christopher Scheiner [11].
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