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NEAR: New Earths in the Alpha Cen Region (bringing VISIR as a 'visiting instrument' to ESO-VLT-UT4)

Authors :
Markus Kasper
Serban Leveratto
Brunella Carlomagno
Olivier Guyon
Gérard Zins
Olivier Absil
Dirk Kampf
Sven Gutruf
M. Riquelme
Eric Pantin
Kjetil Dohlen
Hans-Ulrich Käufl
Peter Klupar
Garreth Ruane
Dimitri Mawet
Ralf Siebenmorgen
Gerd Jakob
Eloy Fuenteseca
Nancy Ageorges
Mikael Karlsson
Arnd Reutlinger
Robin Arsenault
Michael Sterzik
Evans, Christopher J.
Simard, Luc
Takami, Hideki
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE), 2018.

Abstract

By adding a dedicated coronagraph, ESO in collaboration with the Breakthrough Initiatives, modifies the Very Large Telescope mid-IR imager (VISIR) to further boost the high dynamic range imaging capability this instru- ment has. After the VISIR upgrade in 2012, where coronagraphic masks were first added to VISIR, it became evident that coronagraphy at a ground-based 8m-class telescope critically needs adaptive optics, even at wavelengths as long as 10μm. For VISIR, a work-horse observatory facility instrument in normal operations, this is ”easiest” achieved by bringing VISIR as a visiting instrument to the ESO-VLT-UT4 having an adaptive M2. This “visit” enables a meaningful search for Earth-like planets in the habitable zone around both α-Cen1,2. Meaningful here means, achieving a contrast of ≈ 10^(-6) within ≈ 0.8arcsec from the star while maintaining basically the normal sensitivity of VISIR. This should allow to detect a planet twice the diameter of Earth. Key components will be a diffractive coronagraphic mask, the annular groove phase mask (AGPM), optimized for the most sensitive spectral band-pass in the N-band, complemented by a sophisticated apodizer at the level of the Lyot stop. For VISIR noise filtering based on fast chopping is required. A novel internal chopper system will be integrated into the cryostat. This chopper is based on the standard technique from early radio astronomy, conceived by the microwave pioneer Robert Dicke in 1946, which was instrumental for the discovery of the 3K radio background.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6fc4e88573c201a0aa7e911aef5a0098