A high precision technique to correct for residual atmospheric dispersion in high-contrast imaging systems
P. Pathak, O. Guyon, N. Jovanovic, J. Lozi, F. Martinache, Y. Minowa,, T. Kudo, H. Takami, Y. Hayano, N. Narita

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel on-sky measurement and correction method for residual atmospheric dispersion in high-contrast imaging systems, significantly improving PSF stability for exoplanet detection.
Contribution
It presents the first on-sky measurement and correction technique for residual atmospheric dispersion using adaptive speckle diagnostics, enhancing ADC performance in high-contrast imaging.
Findings
Reduced residual atmospheric dispersion from 18.8 mas to 4.2 mas in broadband light
Achieved residual dispersion of 1.4 mas in H-band only
Demonstrated on-sky correction improves high-contrast imaging capabilities
Abstract
Direct detection and spectroscopy of exoplanets requires high contrast imaging. For habitable exoplanets in particular, located at small angular separation from the host star, it is crucial to employ small inner working angle (IWA) coronagraphs that efficiently suppress starlight. These coronagraphs, in turn, require careful control of the wavefront which directly impacts their performance. For ground-based telescopes, atmospheric refraction is also an important factor, since it results in a smearing of the PSF, that can no longer be efficiently suppressed by the coronagraph. Traditionally, atmospheric refraction is compensated for by an atmospheric dispersion compensator (ADC). ADC control relies on an a priori model of the atmosphere whose parameters are solely based on the pointing of the telescope, which can result in imperfect compensation. For a high contrast instrument like the…
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.
