SPEED: the Segmented Pupil Experiment for Exoplanet Detection
Martinez Patrice, Preis Olivier, Gouvret Carole, Dejongue Julien,, Daban Jean-Baptiste, Spang Alain, Martinache Frantz, Beaulieu Mathilde,, Janin-Potiron Pierre, Abe Lyu, Fantei-Caujolle Yan, Mattei Damien, and, Ottogali Sebastien

TL;DR
SPEED is a new experimental platform designed to develop and test high-contrast imaging techniques for segmented telescopes, aiming to improve exoplanet detection capabilities at very close angular separations.
Contribution
The paper introduces the design and philosophy of the SPEED instrument, a facility for advancing high-contrast imaging technologies for segmented telescopes.
Findings
Design of the SPEED bench and its components
Integration of wavefront control and shaping techniques
Potential for technological progress in exoplanet imaging
Abstract
Searching for nearby exoplanets with direct imaging is one of the major scientific drivers for both space and ground-based programs. While the second generation of dedicated high-contrast instruments on 8-m class telescopes is about to greatly expand the sample of directly imaged planets, exploring the planetary parameter space to hitherto-unseen regions ideally down to Terrestrial planets is a major technological challenge for the forthcoming decades. This requires increasing spatial resolution and significantly improving high contrast imaging capabilities at close angular separations. Segmented telescopes offer a practical path toward dramatically enlarging telescope diameter from the ground (ELTs), or achieving optimal diameter in space. However, translating current technological advances in the domain of high-contrast imaging for monolithic apertures to the case of segmented…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
