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The VORTEX project: first results and perspectives

Authors :
Elsa Huby
Julien Milli
Aïssa Jolivet
Serge Habraken
Carlos A. Gomez Gonzalez
Denis Defrere
Mikael Karlsson
Christian Delacroix
Jean Surdej
Marc Van Droogenbroeck
Brunella Carlomagno
Ernesto Vargas Catalan
Olivier Absil
Dimitri Mawet
Pontus Forsberg
Pierre-Antoine Absil
Pierre Piron
Valentin Christiaens
Marchetti, Enrico
Close, Laird M.
Véran, Jean-Pierre
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

(abridged) Vortex coronagraphs are among the most promising solutions to perform high contrast imaging at small angular separations. They feature a very small inner working angle, a clear 360 degree discovery space, have demonstrated very high contrast capabilities, are easy to implement on high-contrast imaging instruments, and have already been extensively tested on the sky. Since 2005, we have been designing, developing and testing an implementation of the charge-2 vector vortex phase mask based on concentric subwavelength gratings, referred to as the Annular Groove Phase Mask (AGPM). Science-grade mid-infrared AGPMs were produced in 2012 for the first time, using plasma etching on synthetic diamond substrates. They have been validated on a coronagraphic test bench, showing broadband peak rejection up to 500:1 in the L band, which translates into a raw contrast of about $6\times 10^{-5}$ at $2 \lambda/D$. Three of them have now been installed on world-leading diffraction-limited infrared cameras (VLT/NACO, VLT/VISIR and LBT/LMIRCam). During the science verification observations with our L-band AGPM on NACO, we observed the beta Pictoris system and obtained unprecedented sensitivity limits to planetary companions down to the diffraction limit ($0.1''$). More recently, we obtained new images of the HR 8799 system at L band during the AGPM first light on LMIRCam. After reviewing these first results obtained with mid-infrared AGPMs, we will discuss the short- and mid-term goals of the on-going VORTEX project, which aims to improve the performance of our vortex phase masks for future applications on second-generation high-contrast imagers and on future extremely large telescopes (ELTs).<br />Comment: To appear in SPIE proceedings vol. 9148

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d1ea2b37bab7b42a06ab015681bd7152