Back to Search Start Over

Electric Field Conjugation with the Project 1640 coronagraph

Authors :
Cady, Eric
Baranec, Christoph
Beichman, Charles
Brenner, Douglas
Burruss, Rick
Crepp, Justin
Dekany, Richard
Hale, David
Hillenbrand, Lynne
Hinkley, Sasha
Ligon, E. Robert
Lockhart, Thomas
Oppenheimer, Ben R.
Parry, Ian
Pueyo, Laurent
Rice, Emily
Roberts, Jr., Lewis C.
Roberts, Jennifer
Shao, Michael
Sivaramakrishnan, Anand
Soummer, Remi
Tang, Hong
Truong, Tuan
Vasisht, Gautam
Vescelus, Fred
Wallace, J. Kent
Zhai, Chengxing
Zimmerman, Neil
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

The Project 1640 instrument on the 200-inch Hale telescope at Palomar Observatory is a coronagraphic instrument with an integral field spectrograph at the back end, designed to find young, self-luminous planets around nearby stars. To reach the necessary contrast for this, the PALM-3000 adaptive optics system corrects for fast atmospheric speckles, while CAL, a phase-shifting interferometer in a Mach-Zehnder configuration, measures the quasistatic components of the complex electric field in the pupil plane following the coronagraphic stop. Two additional sensors measure and control low-order modes. These field measurements may then be combined with a system model and data taken separately using a white-light source internal to the AO system to correct for both phase and amplitude aberrations. Here, we discuss and demonstrate the procedure to maintain a half-plane dark hole in the image plane while the spectrograph is taking data, including initial on-sky performance.<br />Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, in Proceedings of SPIE, 8864-19 (2013)

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1309.6357
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2024635