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Asgard/NOTT: L-band nulling interferometry at the VLTI. II. Warm optical design and injection system

Authors :
Garreau, Germain
Bigioli, Azzurra
Laugier, Romain
Raskin, Gert
Morren, Johan
Berger, Jean-Philippe
Dandumont, Colin
Goldsmith, Harry-Dean Kenchington
Gross, Simon
Ireland, Michael
Labadie, Lucas
Loicq, Jérôme
Madden, Stephen
Martin, Guillermo
Martinod, Marc-Antoine
Mazzoli, Alexandra
Sanny, Ahmed
Shao, Hancheng
Yan, Kunlun
Defrère, Denis
Source :
J. Astron. Telesc. Instrum. Syst. 10(1), 015002 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Asgard/NOTT (previously Hi-5) is a European Research Council (ERC)-funded project hosted at KU Leuven and a new visitor instrument for the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI). Its primary goal is to image the snow line region around young stars using nulling interferometry in the L-band (3.5 to 4.0)$\mu$m, where the contrast between exoplanets and their host stars is advantageous. The breakthrough is the use of a photonic beam combiner, which only recently allowed the required theoretical raw contrast of $10^{-3}$ in this spectral range. Nulling interferometry observations of exoplanets also require a high degree of balancing between the four pupils of the VLTI in terms of intensity, phase, and polarization. The injection into the beam combiner and the requirements of nulling interferometry are driving the design of the warm optics and the injection system. The optical design up to the beam combiner is presented. It offers a technical solution to efficiently couple the light from the VLTI into the beam combiner. During the coupling, the objective is to limit throughput losses to 5% of the best expected efficiency for the injection. To achieve this, a list of different loss sources is considered with their respective impact on the injection efficiency. Solutions are also proposed to meet the requirements on beam balancing for intensity, phase, and polarization. The different properties of the design are listed, including the optics used, their alignment and tolerances, and their impact on the instrumental performances in terms of throughput and null depth. The performance evaluation gives an expected throughput loss of less than <6.4% of the best efficiency for the injection and a null depth of $\sim2.10^{-3}$, mainly from optical path delay errors outside the scope of this work.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in JATIS. 23 pages, 11 figures, 8 tables

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
J. Astron. Telesc. Instrum. Syst. 10(1), 015002 (2024)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2402.09013
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JATIS.10.1.015002