Active coronagraphy is deemed to play a key role for the next generation of high-contrast instruments, notably in order to deal with large segmented mirrors that might exhibit time-dependent pupil merit function, caused by missing or defective segments. To this purpose, we recently introduced a new technological framework called digital adaptive coronagraphy (DAC), making use of liquid-crystal spatial light modulators (SLMs) display panels operating as active focal-plane phase mask coronagraphs. Here, we first review the latest contrast performance, measured in laboratory conditions with monochromatic visible light, and describe a few potential pathways to improve SLM coronagraphic nulling in the future. We then unveil a few unique capabilities of SLM-based DAC that were recently, or are currently in the process of being, demonstrated in our laboratory, including NCPA wavefront sensing, aperture-matched adaptive phase masks, coronagraphic nulling of multiple star systems, and coherent differential imaging (CDI).
@article{arxiv.1808.00589,
title = {SLM-based Digital Adaptive Coronagraphy: Current Status and Capabilities},
author = {Jonas Kuhn and Polychronis Patapis and Xin Lu and Marcel Arikan},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1808.00589},
year = {2018}
}
Comments
14 pages, 9 figures, to appear in Proceedings of the SPIE, paper 10706-93