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Characterization of microdot apodizers for imaging exoplanets with next-generation space telescopes

Authors :
Dimitri Mawet
Stuart B. Shaklan
J. Kent Wallace
Manxuan Zhang
Jacques-Robert Delorme
Garreth Ruane
Nemanja Jovanovic
Jeffrey Jewell
Lystrup, Makenzie
MacEwen, Howard A.
Fazio, Giovanni G.
Batalha, Natalie
Siegler, Nicholas
Tong, Edward C.
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE), 2018.

Abstract

A major science goal of future, large-aperture, optical space telescopes is to directly image and spectroscopically analyze reflected light from potentially habitable exoplanets. To accomplish this, the optical system must suppress diffracted light from the star to reveal point sources approximately ten orders of magnitude fainter than the host star at small angular separation. Coronagraphs with microdot apodizers achieve the theoretical performance needed to image Earth-like planets with a range of possible telescope designs, including those with obscured and segmented pupils. A test microdot apodizer with various bulk patterns (step functions, gradients, and sinusoids) and 4 different dot sizes (3, 5, 7, and 10 $��$m) made of small chrome squares on anti-reflective glass was characterized with microscopy, optical laser interferometry, as well as transmission and reflectance measurements at wavelengths of 600 and 800 nm. Microscopy revealed the microdots were fabricated to high precision. Results from laser interferometry showed that the phase shifts observed in reflection vary with the local microdot fill factor. Transmission measurements showed that microdot fill factor and transmission were linearly related for dot sizes >5 $��$m. However, anomalously high transmittance was measured when the dot size is<br />Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2018: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter Wave

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9d74b78a0573734863264826e2edb7f5