Utilization of the Wavefront Sensor and Short-Exposure Images for Simultaneous Estimation of Quasi-static Aberration and Exoplanet Intensity
Richard A. Frazin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method combining wavefront sensor data and short-exposure images to simultaneously estimate static aberrations and exoplanet brightness, significantly improving detection efficiency and accuracy in exoplanet imaging.
Contribution
The paper presents a new framework that leverages millisecond wavefront measurements to enhance the estimation of planetary signals and static aberrations in exoplanet observations.
Findings
Estimates planetary intensity within a few seconds.
Achieves 1% accuracy in static aberration estimation.
Recovers planet brightness with approximately 20% accuracy.
Abstract
This paper provides a framework for the incorporation of the wavefront sensor measurements in the context of observing modes in which the science camera takes millisecond exposures. In this formulation, the wavefront sensor measurements provide a means to jointly estimate the static speckle and the planetary signal. The ability to estimate planetary intensities in as little as few seconds has the potential to greatly improve the efficiency of exoplanet search surveys. Unlike currently used methods, in which increasing the observation time beyond a certain threshold is useless, this method produces estimates whose error covariances decrease more quickly than inversely proportional to the observation time. This is due to the fact that the estimates of the quasi-static aberrations are informed by a new random (but approximately known) wavefront every millisecond. The method can be extended…
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