Characterisation of exoplanets is key to understanding their formation, composition and potential for life. Nulling interferometry, combined with extreme adaptive optics, is among the most promising techniques to advance this goal. We present an integrated-optic nuller whose design is directly scalable to future science-ready interferometric nullers: the Guided-Light Interferometric Nulling Technology, deployed at the Subaru Telescope. It combines four beams and delivers spatial and spectral information. We demonstrate the capability of the instrument, achieving a null depth better than 10 with a precision of 10 for all baselines, in laboratory conditions with simulated seeing applied. On sky, the instrument delivered angular diameter measurements of stars that were 2.5 times smaller than the diffraction limit of the telescope. These successes pave the way for future design enhancements: scaling to more baselines, improved photonic component and handling low-order atmospheric aberration within the instrument, all of which will contribute to enhance sensitivity and precision.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8084960 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-22769-x | DOI Listing |
Exoplanets can be detected very close to stars using single-mode cross-aperture nulling interferometry, a photonic technique that relies on the inability of an anti-symmetric stellar point-spread function to couple to the symmetric mode of a single-mode fiber. We prepared an asymmetric field distribution from a laboratory point source using a flat geometric-phase-based pupil-plane phase-knife mask comprised of a planar liquid crystal polymer layer with orthogonal optical axes on opposite sides of a linear pupil bisector. Our mask yielded an on-axis laboratory point-source rejection (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh angular resolution imaging is an increasingly important capability in contemporary astrophysics. Of particular relevance to emerging fields such as the characterization of exoplanetary systems, imaging at the required spatial scales and contrast levels results in forbidding challenges in the correction of atmospheric phase errors, which in turn drives demanding requirements for precise wavefront sensing. Asgard is the next-generation instrument suite at the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI), targeting advances in sensitivity, spectral resolution, and nulling interferometry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the past 10 years, adaptive wavefront interferometry (AWI) has been employed for measuring freeform surface profiles. However, existing AWI techniques relying on stepwise and model-free stochastic optimizations have resulted in inefficient tests. To address these issues, deterministic adaptive wavefront interferometry (DAWI) is firstly introduced in this paper based on backpropagation (BP), which employs a loss function to simultaneously reconstruct and sparsify initial incomplete interferometric fringes until they are nulled.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFX-ray mirrors with single-digit nanometer height errors are required to preserve the quality of ultra-intense photon beams produced at synchrotron or free electron laser sources. To fabricate suitable X-ray mirrors, accurate metrology data is needed for deterministic polishing machines. Fizeau phase-shifting interferometers are optimized to achieve accurate results under nulled conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper presents a non-nulling absolute interferometric method for fast and full-area measurement of aspheric surfaces without the necessity of any mechanical movement. Several single frequency laser diodes with some degree of laser tunability are used to achieve an absolute interferometric measurement. The virtual interconnection of three different wavelengths makes it possible to accurately measure the geometrical path difference between the measured aspheric surface and the reference Fizeau surface independently for each pixel of the camera sensor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!