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Astronomical seeing from the summits of the Antarctic plateau

Marks, R. D., 2002, Astronomy and Astrophysics, 385, 328 | View on ADS (2002A&A...385..328M) | Access via DOI

Abstract

From the South Pole, microthermal turbulence within a narrow surface boundary layer some 200 m thick provides the dominant contribution to the astronomical seeing. We present results for the seeing at a wavelength of 2.4 mu m. The narrow turbulence layer above the site, confined close to the surface, provides greatly superior conditions for adaptive optics correction than do temperate latitude sites. An analysis of the available meteorological data for the Antarctic plateau suggests that sites on its summit, such as Domes A and C, probably experience significantly better boundary layer seeing than does the South Pole. In addition, the inversion layers may be significantly narrower, lending the sites even further to adaptive optics correction than does the Pole. Rodney Marks died tragically at the South Pole in May 2000. This paper presents the most significant previously unpublished results from his Ph.D. Thesis: ``Antarctic site testing: measurement of optical seeing at the South Pole'' (Marks 2001).

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