Calibration of quasi-static aberrations in exoplanet direct-imaging instruments with a Zernike phase-mask sensor
M. N'Diaye, K. Dohlen, T. Fusco, B. Paul

TL;DR
This paper introduces a Zernike phase-mask sensor technique for accurately calibrating quasi-static aberrations in exoplanet imaging instruments, significantly reducing speckles and enhancing exoplanet detection capabilities.
Contribution
It presents a novel Zernike phase-contrast method for measuring non-common path aberrations with high accuracy during observations.
Findings
Potential reduction of chromatic NCPA by a factor of 3 to 10.
Quasi-static speckles could be reduced by a factor of 10 to 100.
Improved exoplanet imaging sensitivity and contrast.
Abstract
Context. Several exoplanet direct imaging instruments will soon be in operation. They use an extreme adaptive optics (XAO) system to correct the atmospheric turbulence and provide a highly-corrected beam to a near-infrared (NIR) coronagraph for starlight suppression. The performance of the coronagraph is however limited by the non-common path aberrations (NCPA) due to the differential wavefront errors existing between the visible XAO sensing path and the NIR science path, leading to residual speckles in the coronagraphic image. Aims. Several approaches have been developed in the past few years to accurately calibrate the NCPA, correct the quasi-static speckles and allow the observation of exoplanets at least 1e6 fainter than their host star. We propose an approach based on the Zernike phase-contrast method for the measurements of the NCPA between the optical path seen by the visible XAO…
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