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In ground-based astronomy, the ability to couple the light into single-mode fibers (SMFs) is limited by atmospheric turbulence, which prohibits the use of many astrophotonic instruments. We propose a silicon-on-insulator photonic chip capable of coherently coupling the out-of-phase beamlets from the subapertures of a telescope pupil into an SMF. The PIC consists of an array of grating couplers used to inject the light from free space into single-mode waveguides on a chip. Metalic heaters modulate the refractive index of a coiled section of the waveguides, facilitating the co-phasing of the propagating modes. The beamlets can then be coherently combined to efficiently deliver the light to an output SMF. In an adaptive optics system, the phase corrector would act as a deformable mirror commanded by a controller that takes phase measurements from a wavefront sensor. We present experimental results for the PIC tested on an AO testbed and compare the performance to simulations.
Diab et al. (Tue,) studied this question.