The APOD description said:
I didn't know it was possible to deform mirrors quickly enough to correct for turbulence, but I clicked on the MAD link and (sure enough) found the following:using multiple guide stars and deformable mirrors to sense and correct for the distortions produced by turbulence in Earth's atmosphere
Wow! Then I noticed they've had this instrument working since March 2007, and that its forerunners have been working since 1989. I must have been looking the other way. Anyway, I'm impressed.Adaptive Optics systems work by means of a computer-controlled deformable mirror (DM) that counteracts the image distortion induced by atmospheric turbulence. It is based on real-time optical corrections computed from image data obtained by a 'wavefront sensor' (a special camera) at very high speed, many hundreds of times each second.