Efficient photonic reformatting of celestial light for diffraction-limited spectroscopy
David G. MacLachlan, Robert J. Harris, Itandehui Gris-S\'anchez,, Timothy J. Morris, Debaditya Choudhury, Eric Gendron, Alastair G. Basden,, Izabela J. Spaleniak, Alexander Arriola, Tim A. Birks, Jeremy R., Allington-Smith, Robert R. Thomson

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a photonic device that reformats celestial light into a diffraction-limited pseudo-slit, enabling high-resolution spectroscopy with improved efficiency and reduced modal noise, using adaptive optics on a telescope.
Contribution
It introduces a novel integrated photonic reformatting device combining multicore fibre lantern and waveguides, achieving efficient, diffraction-limited light coupling for astronomical spectroscopy.
Findings
Achieved 47-53% transmission efficiency with adaptive optics
Demonstrated effective mode reformatting of stellar light
Showed potential for high-resolution spectroscopy with AO
Abstract
The spectral resolution of a dispersive astronomical spectrograph is limited by the trade-off between throughput and the width of the entrance slit. Photonic guided-wave transitions have been proposed as a route to bypass this trade-off, by enabling the efficient reformatting of incoherent seeing-limited light collected by the telescope into a linear array of single modes: a pseudo-slit which is highly multimode in one axis but diffraction-limited in the dispersion axis of the spectrograph. It is anticipated that the size of a single-object spectrograph fed with light in this manner would be essentially independent of the telescope aperture size. A further anticipated benefit is that such spectrographs would be free of `modal noise', a phenomenon that occurs in high-resolution multimode fibre-fed spectrographs due to the coherent nature of the telescope point-spread-function (PSF). We…
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