The Extreme Polarimeter: Design, Performance, First Results & Upgrades
M. Rodenhuis, H. Canovas, S. V. Jeffers, M. de Juan Ovelar, L. Homs,, M. Min, C. U. Keller

TL;DR
The Extreme Polarimeter is a high-sensitivity imaging polarimeter designed for studying circumstellar environments, demonstrating effective performance and initial results in detecting polarized scattered light around stars without adaptive optics.
Contribution
This paper introduces the design, calibration, and initial observational results of the Extreme Polarimeter, a novel instrument for high-contrast imaging polarimetry at visible wavelengths.
Findings
Polarimetric sensitivity better than 10^-4
Contrast between star and circumstellar material around 10^-6
Calibration errors below 1%
Abstract
Well over 700 exoplanets have been detected to date. Only a handful of these have been observed directly. Direct observation is extremely challenging due to the small separation and very large contrast involved. Imaging polarimetry offers a way to decrease the contrast between the unpolarized starlight and the light that has become linearly polarized after scattering by circumstellar material. This material can be the dust and debris found in circumstellar disks, but also the atmosphere or surface of an exoplanet. We present the design, calibration approach, polarimetric performance and sample observation results of the Extreme Polarimeter, an imaging polarimeter for the study of circumstellar environments in scattered light at visible wavelengths. The polarimeter uses the beam-exchange technique, in which the two orthogonal polarization states are imaged simultaneously and a…
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