A New High Contrast Imaging Program at Palomar Observatory
Sasha Hinkley (1,10), Ben R. Oppenheimer (2), Neil Zimmerman (3,2),, Douglas Brenner (2), Ian R. Parry (4), Justin R. Crepp (1), Gautam Vasisht, (7), Edgar Ligon (7), David King (4), Remi Soummer (5), Anand, Sivaramakrishnan (5,2,6), Charles Beichman (9), Michael Shao (7)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new high contrast imaging instrument at Palomar Observatory designed to image and analyze brown dwarfs and exoplanets near nearby stars, utilizing advanced adaptive optics and coronagraphy for improved contrast.
Contribution
It presents a novel integrated instrument combining a microlens-based spectrograph, coronagraph, and wave front calibration, enhancing high contrast imaging capabilities.
Findings
Achieved initial H-band contrast of 2 x 10^-4 at 1 arcsecond
Spectral speckle suppression improved contrast by a factor of 10-20
Demonstrated the system's potential for high contrast imaging in the Northern Hemisphere
Abstract
We describe a new instrument that forms the core of a long-term high contrast imaging program at the 200-inch Hale Telescope at Palomar Observatory. The primary scientific thrust is to obtain images and low-resolution spectroscopy of brown dwarfs and young Jovian mass exoplanets in the vicinity of stars within 50 parsecs of the Sun. The instrument is a microlens-based integral field spectrograph integrated with a diffraction limited, apodized-pupil Lyot coronagraph, mounted behind the Palomar adaptive optics system. The spectrograph obtains imaging in 23 channels across the J and H bands (1.06 - 1.78 microns). In addition to obtaining spectra, this wavelength resolution allows suppression of the chromatically dependent speckle noise, which we describe. We have recently installed a novel internal wave front calibration system that will provide continuous updates to the AO system every…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
