Nulling interferometry: performance comparison between Antarctica and other ground-based sites
O. Absil, V. Coude du Foresto, M. Barillot, M. R. Swain

TL;DR
This study compares the performance of nulling interferometers at Antarctica's Dome C with temperate sites, showing Antarctic conditions enable more sensitive detection of circumstellar dust with smaller telescopes.
Contribution
It introduces a conceptual design for ALADDIN and demonstrates that Antarctic site conditions significantly improve nulling interferometry performance over temperate sites.
Findings
Antarctic site conditions allow smaller telescopes to outperform larger ones at temperate sites.
Detection of dense circumstellar disks is feasible within hours using Antarctic interferometry.
Turbulence conditions at Dome C relax control loop requirements, easing instrument design constraints.
Abstract
Detecting the presence of circumstellar dust around nearby solar-type main sequence stars is an important pre-requisite for the design of future life-finding space missions such as ESA's Darwin or NASA's Terrestrial Planet Finder (TPF). The high Antarctic plateau may provide appropriate conditions to perform such a survey from the ground. We investigate the performance of a nulling interferometer optimised for the detection of exozodiacal discs at Dome C, on the high Antarctic plateau, and compare it to the expected performance of similar instruments at temperate sites. Based on the currently available measurements of the turbulence characteristics at Dome C, we adapt the GENIEsim software (Absil et al. 2006, A&A 448) to simulate the performance of a nulling interferometer on the high Antarctic plateau. To feed a realistic instrumental configuration into the simulator, we propose a…
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