Final A&T Stages of the Gemini Planet Finder
M. Hartung (1), B. Macintosh (2), L. Poyneer (2), D. Savransky (2), D., Gavel (3), D. Palmer (2), S. Thomas (4), D. Dillon (3), J. Chilcote (5), P., Ingraham (6), N. Sadakuni (1), K. Wallace (7), M. D. Perin (8), C. Marois, (9), J. Maire (10), F. Rantakyro (1), P. Hibon (1)

TL;DR
The paper reports on the final acceptance testing and performance of the Gemini Planet Imager, an advanced adaptive optics system designed for exoplanet imaging, highlighting recent optimizations and future upgrade prospects.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of GPI's final testing, lab performance, and potential enhancements, serving as a pathfinder for AO technologies on future telescopes.
Findings
Successful completion of acceptance testing in 2013
Achieved contrast performance with speckle nulling
Potential for discovering 20-40 exoplanets in 3 years
Abstract
The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) is currently in its final Acceptance & Testing stages. GPI is an XAO system based on a tweeter & woofer architecture (43 & 9 actuators respectively across the pupil), with the tweeter being a Boston Michromachines MEMS device. The XAO AO system is tightly integrated with a Lyot apodizing coronagraph. Acceptance testing started in February 2013 at the University of California, Santa Cruz. A conclusive acceptance review was held in July 2013 and the instrument was found ready for shipment to the Gemini South telescope on Cerro Pachon, Chile. Commissioning at the telescope will take place by the end of 2013, matching the summer window of the southern hemisphere. According to current estimates the 3 year planet finding campaign (890 allocated hours) might discover, image, and spectroscopically analyze 20 to 40 new exo-planets. Final acceptance testing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
