Experimental Verification of a One-Dimensional Diffraction-Limit Coronagraph
Abstract
We performed an experimental verification of a coronagraph. As a result, we confirmed that, at the focal region where the planetary point spread function exists, the coronagraph system mitigates the raw contrast of a star-planet system by at least even for the 1- star-planet separation. In addition, the verified coronagraph keeps the shapes of the off-axis point spread functions when the setup has the source angular separation of 1. The low-order wavefront error and the non-zero extinction ratio of the linear polarizer may affect the currently confirmed contrast. The sharpness of the off-axis point spread function generated by the sub- separated sources is promising for the fiber-based observation of exoplanets. The coupling efficiency with a single mode fiber exceeds 50% when the angular separation is greater than 3--4. For sub- separated sources, the peak positions (obtained with Gaussian fitting) of the output point spread functions are different from the angular positions of sources; the peak position moved from about to as the angular separation of the light source varies from to . The off-axis throughput including the fiber-coupling efficiency (with respect to no focal plane mask) is about 40% for 1- separated sources and 10% for 0.5- separated ones (excluding the factor of the ratio of pupil aperture width and Lyot stop width), where we assumed a linear-polarized-light injection. In addition, because this coronagraph can remove point sources on a line in the sky, it has another promising application for high-contrast imaging of exoplanets in binary systems.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2306.01225,
title = {Experimental Verification of a One-Dimensional Diffraction-Limit Coronagraph},
author = {Satoshi Itoh and Taro Matsuo and Shunsuke Ota and Kensuke Hara and Yuji Ikeda and Reiki Kojima and Toru Yamada and Takahiro Sumi},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2306.01225},
year = {2023}
}
Comments
18 pages, 10 figures, accepted for the Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific