SIMM Method and Data Collection
Rather than relying on traditional Differential Image Motion Monitor (DIMM) techniques, which require a dual-aperture mask and moving telescope, the SM-4 uses a Single Image Motion Monitor (SIMM) approach. It continuously images Polaris, calculating the root mean square (RMS) motion of the star’s centroid over a set of 256 frames. This process takes about one minute and avoids mechanical tracking errors and internal tube currents.
The custom software developed by Dr. Alan Holmes corrects for Polaris’s slow drift across the field during the night and converts measurements to zenith FWHM seeing values using standard atmospheric models. Results are displayed in real time and logged to text files every five minutes in the SeeingMonitor directory. A live graph of the last 12 hours is updated continuously and can be accessed or posted to a website if needed.