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Upgrading the Gemini Planet Imager calibration unit with a photon counting focal plane wavefront sensor

Authors :
Christian Marois
Tim Hardy
Qiang Fu
William Thompson
Jennifer Dunn
Benjamin L. Gerard
Simon Thibault
Eric L. Nielsen
Glen Herriot
Suresh Sivanandam
Olivier Lardière
Wolfgang Heidrich
Dmitry Sivransky
Colin Bradley
Jean-Pierre Veran
Andre Anthony
Source :
Adaptive Optics Systems VII.
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
SPIE, 2020.

Abstract

High-contrast imaging instruments have advanced techniques to improve contrast, but they remain limited by uncorrected stellar speckles, often lacking a “second stage” correction to complement the Adaptive Optics (AO) correction. We are implementing a new second stage speckle-correction solution for the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI), replacing the instrument calibration unit (CAL) with the Fast Atmospheric Self coherent camera Technique (FAST), a new version of the self-coherent camera (SCC) concept. Our proposed upgrade (CAL2.0) will use a common-path interferometer design to enable speckle correction, through post-processing and/or by a feedback loop to the AO deformable mirror. FAST utilizes a new type of coronagraphic mask that will enable, for the first time, speckle correction down to millisecond timescales. The system's main goal is to improve the contrast by up to 100x in a halfdark hole to enable a new regime of science discoveries. Our team has been developing this new technology at the NRC's Extreme Wavefront control for Exoplanet and Adaptive optics Research Topics (NEW EARTH) laboratory over the past several years. The GPI CAL2.0 update is funded (November 2020), and the system’s first light is expected late 2023.<br />Adaptive Optics Systems VII, December 14-18, 2020, Online Only, United States

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Adaptive Optics Systems VII
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....30ab9c7e555a271210eb10b83327fb6b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2563010