Single mode, extreme precision Doppler spectrographs
Christian Schwab, Sergio G. Leon-Saval, Christopher H. Betters, Joss, Bland-Hawthorn, Suvrath Mahadevan

TL;DR
This paper discusses the development of single mode fiber-fed, high-resolution Doppler spectrographs that leverage astrophotonics and adaptive optics to achieve unprecedented radial velocity precision for exoplanet detection.
Contribution
It introduces a novel concept for a single mode, extreme precision Doppler spectrograph utilizing astrophotonics and adaptive optics technologies.
Findings
Single mode fiber feeds improve spectrograph stability.
Elimination of modal noise enhances measurement precision.
Compact design enables integration with advanced wavelength calibrators.
Abstract
The 'holy grail' of exoplanet research today is the detection of an earth-like planet: a rocky planet in the habitable zone around a main-sequence star. Extremely precise Doppler spectroscopy is an indispensable tool to find and characterize earth-like planets; however, to find these planets around solar-type stars, we need nearly one order of magnitude better radial velocity (RV) precision than the best current spectrographs provide. Recent developments in astrophotonics (Bland-Hawthorn & Horton 2006, Bland-Hawthorn et al. 2010) and adaptive optics (AO) enable single mode fiber (SMF) fed, high resolution spectrographs, which can realize the next step in precision. SMF feeds have intrinsic advantages over multimode fiber or slit coupled spectrographs: The intensity distribution at the fiber exit is extremely stable, and as a result the line spread function of a well-designed…
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