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Gemini Planet Imager Observational Calibrations VIII: Characterization and Role of Satellite Spots

Authors :
Dmitry Savransky
Stephen J. Goodsell
Jason J. Wang
Joanna Bulger
Abhijith Rajan
Robert J. De Rosa
Marshall D. Perrin
Christian Marois
Ben R. Oppenheimer
Patrick Ingraham
Fredrik T. Rantakyrö
Kimberly Ward-Duong
Anand Sivaramakrishnan
James R. Graham
Jennifer Patience
Alexandra Z. Greenbaum
Laurent Pueyo
Naru Sadakuni
Pascale Hibon
Paul Kalas
Andrew Cardwell
Sandrine Thomas
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
arXiv, 2014.

Abstract

The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) combines extreme adaptive optics, an integral field spectrograph, and a high performance coronagraph to directly image extrasolar planets in the near-infrared. Because the coronagraph blocks most of the light from the star, it prevents the properties of the host star from being measured directly. Instead, satellite spots, which are created by diffraction from a square grid in the pupil plane, can be used to locate the star and extract its spectrum. We describe the techniques implemented into the GPI Data Reduction Pipeline to measure the properties of the satellite spots and discuss the precision of the reconstructed astrometry and spectrophotometry of the occulted star. We find the astrometric precision of the satellite spots in an H-band datacube to be 0.05 pixels and is best when individual satellite spots have a signal to noise ratio (SNR) of > 20. In regards to satellite spot spectrophotometry, we find that the total flux from the satellite spots is stable to ∼7% and scales linearly with central star brightness and that the shape of the satellite spot spectrum varies on the 2% level.<br />Ground-Based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy V, June 22-26, 2014<br />Series: Proceedings of SPIE; no. 9147

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....42a923191ff77fe7ad46ffe0b96c93df
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1407.2308