deformable mirrors (original) (raw)

Definition: mirrors which can be deformed in a controlled manner, e.g. for wavefront correction in adaptive optics

Alternative term: adaptive mirrors

Categories: article belongs to category general optics general optics, article belongs to category vision, displays and imaging vision, displays and imaging

Related: mirrorsadaptive opticswavefrontsfluorescence microscopypulse shapers

Page views in 12 months: 1353

DOI: 10.61835/43m Cite the article: BibTex BibLaTex plain textHTML Link to this page! LinkedIn

Content quality and neutrality are maintained according to our editorial policy.

📦 For purchasing deformable mirrors, use the RP Photonics Buyer's Guide — an expert-curated directory for finding all relevant suppliers, which also offers advanced purchasing assistance.

Contents

What are Deformable Mirrors?

Deformable mirrors are mirrors where one can deform the reflecting surface in a controlled manner to correct deformed wavefronts. Usually, one has a number of degrees of freedom between a few dozen and several thousands, achieved by using a corresponding number of actuators. Therefore, a deformable mirror can be used not only to compensate simple optical aberrations such as defocus and astigmatism, but also more complicated kinds of wavefront distortion. This is particularly important in the context of adaptive optics. However, there are also deformable mirrors with very few degrees of freedom, and even single-general devices, where only the focal length can be adjusted; they can be used in lasers, for example, or for autofocus functions of cameras.

Types of Deformable Mirrors

Different kinds of deformable mirrors have been developed. A first distinction is between segmented mirrors and mirrors with a continuous reflecting surface:

Segmented Mirrors

The reflecting surface of a segmented mirror consists of small rigid (not deformable) segments which can be separately moved (with one or several degrees of freedom). Movement of one mirror segment usually has a negligible effect on the other segments.

Between the mirror segments, there are necessarily some gaps, which cause some loss of light and also diffraction losses. Additional diffraction losses can arise when neighboring mirror segments are set such that a step arises on the surface. This is unavoidable when mirror segments can be moved only up and down, as shown in Figure 1 (a), but there are also versions with three actuators per mirror, where each mirror can be tilted such that any steps are avoided or at least minimized.

Segmented mirror devices are often realized as micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) on a silicon platform. That scalable technology platform makes it possible to produce mirrors with a large number of segments. The production cost can in principle be fairly low, but rises substantially with the number of segments, since more chip area is then required and the production yield may be reduced with the increasing likelihood of localized faults within a large device. MEMS technology is thus best suited for mirrors with a relatively small size, which can nevertheless have a large number of segments. A possible problem is that one usually requires an optical window for protecting the MEMS device against oxidation; that may be disturbing due to parasitic reflections despite anti-reflection coatings on the window.

segmented mirrors vs. continuous surface deformable mirrors

Figure 1: Different kinds of deformable mirrors: (a) segmented mirror, (b) continuous surface deformable mirror.

Segmented mirrors are usually not used for applications requiring highest image quality, e.g. in astronomical imaging, but can be appropriate particularly where a small size and many degrees of freedom are important, possibly also the relatively low cost.

Continuous Surface Mirrors

Deformable mirrors can also be made with a continuous deformable mirror surface (see Figure 1 (b)), below which suitable actuators are mounted. For example, the deformable surface can be a thin glass sheet, on which a metallic or dielectric coating is placed. Actuators can exert forces on the backside of the glass sheet such that the desired deformation is achieved.

With this type of deformable mirror, some coupling effects are unavoidable: each actuator does not only affect the geometrical shape in its immediate vicinity, but in a somewhat larger area, overlapping with that of neighboring actuators. This is not necessarily a problem, however, e.g. when the voltages applied to the actuators are properly calculated with computer software, which can take into account the coupling. In some other cases, feedback systems solve that problem.

Due to the continuous surface, the optical quality of such a mirror can be very high, and the losses of optical power can be very small, particularly when using a dielectric coating.

The first kind of continuous surface deformable mirror, proposed by Horace W. Babcock when introducing the idea of adaptive optics, was the eidophor. Here, a thin layer of oil is placed on the mirror surface and modified in shape through electrostatic forces. That type of deformable mirror, however, turned out not to be very practical, as it exhibited a high sensitivity to environmental influences, a slow reaction and high chromatic dispersion. (Note that the term eidophor is also used for a kind of television projector, which also works with an electrostatically actuated oil film.)

Actuators

Different kinds of actuators can be used in deformable mirrors:

Devices with Position Sensors and Feedback Control

Some kinds of deformable mirrors contain an array of position sensors with which one continuously monitors the obtained position and corrects it with an electronic feedback loop, e.g. one for each actuator. More sophisticated realizations calculate the suitable pattern of drive signals, taking into account the mechanical coupling, with a digital signal processor.

Such feedback loop techniques are particularly used for large deformable mirrors based on voice coil motors, as used in large astronomical telescopes. Here, the mirror plate can float above the actuator array, held in the desired position by the generated magnetic fields of the coils. The feedback loop leads to a high effective axial stiffness of the actuators. Optimized systems can achieve a response time of the order of 1 ms. However, such specialized systems are quite delicate to engineer and correspondingly expensive.

Design Parameters and Performance Figures of Deformable Mirrors

The following parameters can be relevant for the applications of deformable mirrors:

Size of Reflecting Area

Deformable mirror devices with very different sizes have been developed. Some of them are rather small, for example MEMS devices with a mirror diameter of only a few millimeters, while others have diameters of tens of centimeters. Large deformable mirrors are used mostly as secondary mirrors (or possibly even as primary mirrors) in astronomical telescopes, where the use of a small deformable mirror is not possible because the optical system would then exhibit an unacceptable amount of aberrations.

The reflecting surface has a circular shape in most cases, although one can also make rectangular deformable mirrors.

Number of Actuators

The number of actuators determines the number of the degrees of freedom with which the mirror surface can be deformed. In some cases, a moderate number of e.g. 16 is sufficient (e.g. for a telescope with moderate size), while in other cases hundreds or even several thousand actuators are required (e.g. for large astronomical telescopes). In the future, one may even use devices with tens of thousands of actuators. The higher the number of actuators, the more complicated types of optical aberrations can be compensated — for example, aberrations corresponding to very high order Zernike polynomials.

Actuator Pitch

The pitch (horizontal spacing) of the actuators limits the transverse spatial resolution. Some kinds of actuators allow realizations with a very small actuator pitch, so that a large number of actuators can be accommodated within a relatively small mirror device. That is particularly the case for micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS).

Tentatively, small pitch values of continuous surface mirrors can be realized only in conjunction with a limited mechanical stroke (see below), since the mirror surface cannot be bent arbitrarily.

Large deformable mirrors (e.g. used as secondary mirrors in astronomical telescopes) often do not require particularly small actuators; pitch values of several millimeters or sometimes even centimeters are appropriate. Electromagnetic solutions like voice coil motors are then often used.

Maximum Mechanical Stroke

For a segmented mirror device, it is easy to define the maximum stroke, i.e., the maximum travel range for each mirror. That determines the maximum strength of aberrations which can be compensated. In many cases, one requires a maximum stroke between a few micrometers and some tens of micrometers.

For mirrors with a continuous surface, this limitation is more difficult to fully specify. For example, there may also be a limit to the height difference between neighboring segments or for the curvature due to the stiffness of the mirror membrane. Stroke specifications may ignore such limitations and then apply only to wavefront corrections with moderate orders.

In some applications, tip and tilt as the lowest-order aberrations are compensated with a separate tip/tilt mirror to limit the required stroke from the deformable mirror.

Influence Functions

One can define a set of influence functions which describe the resulting mirror surface shape as the response to the action of a single actuator. From those functions, one can derive the possible spatial resolution and further details like the coupling; most importantly, one can use them to calculate the required pattern of actuator signals to achieve a certain desired mirror shape. This calculation may be done with fast digital signal processors.

Wavefront Precision

Apart from the transverse spatial resolution, it is often important to very precisely control the magnitude of optical phase changes. The variance of the optical phase change often needs to be far below 1 rad2, sometimes even 0.1 rad2. That corresponds to position deviations far below 1 ÎĽm.

Particularly for piezo-based actuators, hysteresis and creep phenomena can limit the achieved position. Therefore, low-hysteresis actuators must be chosen, even though they typically offer lower stroke.

Speed

There is a limited speed with which the mirror deformation can be changed — it may be limited by the types of actuators or (more frequently) by resonances of the whole mechanical construction. Highest speeds are achieved when using lightweight and relatively stiff materials. The fastest deformable mirrors can be positioned in well below 1 ms. Note that the maximum possible bandwidth of an adaptive optics feedback loop is typically an order of magnitude lower than the bandwidth of the deformable mirror alone.

Drive Voltage and Power Consumption

While electromagnetic actuators require only small voltages but substantial currents, piezo-type and electrostatic actuators require large drive voltages but only small currents. All of them require only low electrical powers.

Electromagnetic drives, however, often require substantial currents and electrical powers. The coils are then substantially heated, so that active cooling of the device may be necessary. In some astronomical mirrors with voice coil drives, the dissipated power can be several kilowatts.

Optically Addressed Deformable Mirrors

For deformable mirrors with a large number of actuators, it can be challenging to supply all the actuators with the required signals — particularly if the wires need to carry substantial electric currents. Therefore, optically addressed devices are under development, where the signals for the actuators are provided via light. Such a device may contain photoconductive detectors for forming the drive signals to the actuators.

Applications of Deformable Mirrors

Astronomy

Deformable mirrors have originally been developed for adaptive optics in astronomical imaging. Here, their purpose is the compensation of optical aberrations caused by turbulences in the atmosphere. The basic idea has already been suggested by Horace W. Babcock in 1953 [1], but it took about two decades to develop first prototypes, since besides the deformable mirrors one also required sensitive wavefront sensors and substantial computing power for driving the mirrors with a high enough speed.

Microscopy and OCT

Some methods of microscopy can also profit from adaptive optics with deformable mirrors. This applies particularly in cases where additional optical aberrations are introduced by the sample itself when taking images in a substantial depth, rather than in an ultrathin specimen. For example, there are methods of fluorescence microscopy, where wavefront distortions from layers of the sample are measured using fluorescent beads. For the compensation, one would typically use either a MEMS-based deformable mirror or a liquid crystal modulator.

An alternative method for obtaining microscopic images — even in 3D — is optical coherence tomography (OCT). This can also benefit substantially from adaptive optics [14].

Military Applications

There are also military applications of adaptive optics where deformable mirrors are used. For example, one can pre-compensate wavefront distortions of laser beams sent through the atmosphere over large distances to obtain a sharper focus. Also, there are various imaging applications.

Pulse Shapers

Deformable mirrors can also be used in some kinds of pulse shapers, where they effectively act as spatial light modulators. Here, different spectral components are sent to different locations on the mirror, and by modulating the elevation of the mirror parts one essentially creates controlled wavelength-dependent changes in the optical phase, i.e., changes in the spectral phase of ultrashort pulses. See the article on pulse shapers for more details.

Laser Optimization

Even a single-actuator deformable mirror in a laser resonator can be useful for optimizing the properties of resonator modes — for example, dynamically compensating the effect of thermal lensing. A few more degrees of freedom could also be used for compensating optical aberrations of the thermal lens. Such an intracavity mirror will usually have to withstand substantial optical powers; some deformable mirrors are suitable for that.

Deformable Phase Plates

A similar kind of device is a deformable phase plate which can be operated in transmission rather than in reflection. Such phase plates contain a deformable membrane above a liquid, allowing one to modulate the optical path length in the liquid.

Frequently Asked Questions

This FAQ section was generated with AI based on the article content and has been reviewed by the article’s author (RP).

What is a deformable mirror?

A deformable mirror is an optical mirror with a surface that can be reshaped in a controlled manner. It is used to correct distortions, known as optical aberrations, in the wavefronts of light.

What are the two main types of deformable mirrors?

The two primary types are segmented mirrors, which use an array of small, individually controlled rigid segments, and continuous surface mirrors, which have a single flexible surface deformed by actuators placed behind it.

How are deformable mirrors used in astronomy?

In astronomy, deformable mirrors are a key component of adaptive optics systems. They actively compensate for the wavefront distortions caused by atmospheric turbulence, which significantly sharpens the images from ground-based telescopes.

What kinds of actuators are used to shape deformable mirrors?

Common actuator technologies include piezoelectric actuators, which expand or contract with voltage; electrostatic actuators, often used in micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS); and electromagnetic voice coil motors for larger mirrors.

What performance parameters are important for a deformable mirror?

Key parameters include the number of actuators, which determines the complexity of correctable aberrations; the maximum stroke, or travel range of the surface; and the speed at which the mirror can change its shape.

What are applications of deformable mirrors outside of astronomy?

Deformable mirrors are also used in advanced microscopy to correct for aberrations caused by the sample, in high-power laser systems for beam optimization, in optical coherence tomography (OCT), and in pulse shapers for ultrashort pulses.

Suppliers

Sponsored content: The RP Photonics Buyer's Guide contains 17 suppliers for deformable mirrors. Among them:

Thorlabs, supplier of deformable mirrors

âš™ hardware

deformable mirrors

Thorlabs offers a selection adaptive optics equipment, including MEMS deformable mirrors, piezoelectric deformable mirrors, Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensors, spatial light modulators, and adaptive optics kits. With the introduction of the OM6N series of high-speed optical modulators, Thorlabs has also designed and manufactured a new all-reflective technology based on deformable mirrors for modulating laser power in the 700 — 1350 nm range.

OPTOMAN, supplier of deformable mirrors

âš™ hardware

deformable mirrors

OPTOMAN manufactures high quality deformable mirrors, also called membrane mirrors, solely with Ion Beam Sputtering (IBS) technology. The key advantage of our membrane mirrors lies in the ability to apply high-quality IBS dielectric coatings while maintaining precise surface flatness, even on extremely thin substrates. This ensures excellent optical performance and long-term reliability, providing a significant improvement in system efficiency and reducing distortion. Moreover, these optics feature an enhanced lifetime, reducing the need for frequent replacements and significantly lowering the total cost of ownership.

Bibliography

[1] H. W. Babcock, “The possibility of compensating astronomical seeing”, Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac. 65, 229–236 (1953)
[2] K. Uchino et al., “Deformable mirror using the PMN electrostrictor”, Appl. Opt. 20 (17), 3077 (1981); doi:10.1364/AO.20.003077
[3] R. H. Freeman and J. E. Pearson, “Deformable mirrors for all seasons and reasons”, Appl. Opt. 21 (4), 580 (1982); doi:10.1364/AO.21.000580
[4] J. G. R. Hansen, R. M. Richard and R. R. Shannon, “Deformable primary mirror for a space telescope”, Appl. Opt. 21 (14), 2620 (1982); doi:10.1364/AO.21.002620
[5] K. Nemoto et al., “Optimum control of the laser beam intensity profile with a deformable mirror”, Appl. Opt. 36 (30), 7689 (1997); doi:10.1364/AO.36.007689
[6] G. Vdovin and M. Loktev, “Deformable mirror with thermal actuators”, Opt. Lett. 27 (9), 677 (2002); doi:10.1364/OL.27.000677
[7] E. Dalimier and C. Dainty, “Comparative analysis of deformable mirrors for ocular adaptive optics”, Opt. Express 13 (11), 4275 (2005); doi:10.1364/OPEX.13.004275
[8] P. Laird et al., “Ferrofluidic adaptive mirrors ”, Appl. Opt. 45 (15), 3495 (2006); doi:10.1364/AO.45.003495
[9] J.-H. Lee, Y.-C. Lee and E.-C. Kang, “A cooled deformable bimorph mirror for a high power laser”, J. Opt. Soc. Korea 10 (2), 57 (2006)
[10] D. Brousseau, E. F. Borra and S. Thibault, “Wavefront correction with a 37-actuator ferrofluid deformable mirror”, Opt. Express 15 (26), 18190 (2007); doi:10.1364/OE.15.018190
[11] H.-T. Hsieh et al., “Thin autofocus camera module by a large-stroke micromachined deformable mirror”, Opt. Express 18 (11), 1197 (2010); doi:10.1364/OE.18.001197
[12] W. Liu et al., “A Zernike mode decomposition decoupling control algorithm for dual deformable mirrors adaptive optics system”, Opt. Express 21 (20), 23885 (2013); doi:10.1364/OE.21.023885
[13] P.-Y. Madec, “Overview of deformable mirror technologies for adaptive optics and astronomy”, Proc. SPIE 8447, Adaptive Optics Systems III; 844705 (2012); doi:10.1117/12.924892
[14] R. S. Jonnal et al., “A review of adaptive optics optical coherence tomography: technical advances, scientific applications, and the future”, Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science 57, OCT51-OCT68 (2016); doi:10.1167/iovs.16-19103
[15] S. Piehler et al., “Deformable mirrors for intra-cavity use in high-power thin-disk lasers”, Opt. Express 25 (4), 4254 (2017); doi:10.1364/OE.25.004254
[16] V. Srivastava et al., “Piezo-deformable mirrors for active mode matching in advanced LIGO”, Opt. Express 30 (7), 10491 (2022); doi:10.1364/OE.445088

(Suggest additional literature!)

Questions and Comments from Users

Here you can submit questions and comments. As far as they get accepted by the author, they will appear above this paragraph together with the author’s answer. The author will decide on acceptance based on certain criteria. Essentially, the issue must be of sufficiently broad interest.

Please do not enter personal data here. (See also our privacy declaration.) If you wish to receive personal feedback or consultancy from the author, please contact him, e.g. via e-mail.

By submitting the information, you give your consent to the potential publication of your inputs on our website according to our rules. (If you later retract your consent, we will delete those inputs.) As your inputs are first reviewed by the author, they may be published with some delay.