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The JWST Early Release Science Program for Direct Observations of Exoplanetary Systems IV: NIRISS Aperture Masking Interferometry Performance and Lessons Learned

Authors :
Sallum, Steph
Ray, Shrishmoy
Kammerer, Jens
Sivaramakrishnan, Anand
Cooper, Rachel
Greebaum, Alexandra Z.
Thatte, Deepashri
de Furio, Matthew
Factor, Samuel
Meyer, Michael
Stone, Jordan M.
Carter, Aarynn
Biller, Beth
Hinkley, Sasha
Skemer, Andrew
Suarez, Genaro
Leisenring, Jarron M.
Perrin, Marshall D.
Kraus, Adam L.
Absil, Olivier
Balmer, William O.
Bonnefoy, Mickael
Bryan, Marta L.
Betti, Sarah K.
Boccaletti, Anthony
Bonavita, Mariangela
Booth, Mark
Bowler, Brendan P.
Briesemeister, Zackery W.
Cantalloube, Faustine
Chauvin, Gael
Christiaens, Valentin
Cugno, Gabriele
Currie, Thayne
Danielski, Camilla
Dupuy, Trent J.
Faherty, Jacqueline K.
Chen, Christine H.
Calissendorff, Per
Choquet, Elodie
Fitzgerald, Michael P.
Fortney, Jonathan J.
Franson, Kyle
Girard, Julien H.
Grady, Carol A.
Gonzales, Eileen C.
Henning, Thomas
Hines, Dean C.
Hoch, Kielan K. W.
Hood, Callie E.
Howe, Alex R.
Janson, Markus
Kalas, Paul
Kennedy, Grant M.
Kenworthy, Matthew A.
Kervella, Pierre
Kitzmann, Daniel
Kuzuhara, Masayuki
Lagrange, Anne-Marie
Lagage, Pierre-Olivier
Lawson, Kellen
Lazzoni, Cecilia
Lew, Ben W. P.
Liu, Michael C.
Liu, Pengyu
Llop-Sayson, Jorge
Lloyd, James P.
Lueber, Anna
Macintosh, Bruce
Manjavacas, Elena
Marino, Sebastian
Marley, Mark S.
Marois, Christian
Martinez, Raquel A.
Matthews, Brenda C.
Matthews, Elisabeth C.
Mawet, Dimitri
Mazoyer, Johan
McElwain, Michael W.
Metchev, Stanimir
Miles, Brittany E.
Millar-Blanchaer, Maxwell A.
Molliere, Paul
Moran, Sarah E.
Morley, Caroline V.
Mukherjee, Sagnick
Palma-Bifani, Paulina
Pantin, Eric
Patapis, Polychronis
Petrus, Simon
Pueyo, Laurent
Quanz, Sascha P.
Quirrenbach, Andreas
Rebollido, Isabel
Redai, Jea Adams
Ren, Bin B.
Rickman, Emily
Samland, Matthias
Sargent, B. A.
Schlieder, Joshua E.
Schneider, Glenn
Stapelfeldt, Karl R.
Sutlieff, Ben J.
Tamura, Motohide
Tan, Xianyu
Theissen, Christopher A.
Uyama, Taichi
Vigan, Arthur
Vasist, Malavika
Vos, Johanna M.
Wagner, Kevin
Wang, Jason J.
Ward-Duong, Kimberly
Whiteford, Niall
Wolff, Schuyler G.
Worthen, Kadin
Wyatt, Mark C.
Ygouf, Marie
Zhang, Xi
Zhang, Keming
Zhang, Zhoujian
Zhou, Yifan
Zurlo, Alice
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We present a performance analysis for the aperture masking interferometry (AMI) mode on board the James Webb Space Telescope Near Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph (JWST/NIRISS). Thanks to self-calibrating observables, AMI accesses inner working angles down to and even within the classical diffraction limit. The scientific potential of this mode has recently been demonstrated by the Early Release Science (ERS) 1386 program with a deep search for close-in companions in the HIP 65426 exoplanetary system. As part of ERS 1386, we use the same data set to explore the random, static, and calibration errors of NIRISS AMI observables. We compare the observed noise properties and achievable contrast to theoretical predictions. We explore possible sources of calibration errors and show that differences in charge migration between the observations of HIP 65426 and point-spread function calibration stars can account for the achieved contrast curves. Lastly, we use self-calibration tests to demonstrate that with adequate calibration NIRISS F380M AMI can reach contrast levels of $\sim9-10$ mag at $\gtrsim \lambda/D$. These tests lead us to observation planning recommendations and strongly motivate future studies aimed at producing sophisticated calibration strategies taking these systematic effects into account. This will unlock the unprecedented capabilities of JWST/NIRISS AMI, with sensitivity to significantly colder, lower-mass exoplanets than lower-contrast ground-based AMI setups, at orbital separations inaccessible to JWST coronagraphy.<br />Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, accepted to Astrophysical Journal Letters

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2310.11499
Document Type :
Working Paper