The VORTEX project: first results and perspectives
Olivier Absil, Dimitri Mawet, Christian Delacroix, Pontus Forsberg,, Mikael Karlsson, Serge Habraken, Jean Surdej, Pierre-Antoine Absil, Brunella, Carlomagno, Valentin Christiaens, Denis Defrere, Carlos Gomez Gonzalez, Elsa, Huby, Aissa Jolivet, Julien Milli, Pierre Piron

TL;DR
The VORTEX project advances vortex coronagraph technology, demonstrating high contrast imaging capabilities in the mid-infrared, with successful on-sky tests revealing new insights into exoplanet systems and aiming for future improvements for ELTs.
Contribution
This paper presents the development, testing, and first on-sky results of mid-infrared vortex phase masks, notably the AGPM, and discusses future goals for high-contrast imaging on large telescopes.
Findings
Broadband peak rejection up to 500:1 in the L band
Unprecedented sensitivity limits to planetary companions
Successful on-sky imaging of beta Pictoris and HR 8799 systems
Abstract
(abridged) Vortex coronagraphs are among the most promising solutions to perform high contrast imaging at small angular separations. They feature a very small inner working angle, a clear 360 degree discovery space, have demonstrated very high contrast capabilities, are easy to implement on high-contrast imaging instruments, and have already been extensively tested on the sky. Since 2005, we have been designing, developing and testing an implementation of the charge-2 vector vortex phase mask based on concentric subwavelength gratings, referred to as the Annular Groove Phase Mask (AGPM). Science-grade mid-infrared AGPMs were produced in 2012 for the first time, using plasma etching on synthetic diamond substrates. They have been validated on a coronagraphic test bench, showing broadband peak rejection up to 500:1 in the L band, which translates into a raw contrast of about $6\times…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
