Enhancing stellar spectroscopy with extreme adaptive optics and photonics
Nemanja Jovanovic, Christian Schwab, Nick Cvetojevic, Olivier Guyon, and Frantz Martinache

TL;DR
Extreme adaptive optics systems enable high-precision stellar spectroscopy by improving light concentration and stability, facilitating advanced photonic technologies for detecting exo-Earths around nearby stars.
Contribution
This paper demonstrates how extreme adaptive optics can be integrated with photonic technologies to enhance spectrograph performance and enable new astronomical observations.
Findings
Achieves radial velocity precision of a few m/s.
Enables efficient coupling into photonic devices.
Facilitates detection of exo-Earths around M-dwarfs.
Abstract
Extreme adaptive optics systems are now in operation across the globe. These systems, capable of high order wavefront correction, deliver Strehl ratios of 90% in the near-infrared. Originally intended for the direct imaging of exoplanets, these systems are often equipped with advanced coronagraphs that suppress the on-axis-star, interferometers to calibrate wavefront errors, and low order wavefront sensors to stabilize any tip/tilt residuals to a degree never seen before. Such systems are well positioned to facilitate the detailed spectroscopic characterization of faint substellar companions at small angular separations from the host star. Additionally, the increased light concentration of the point-spread function and the unprecedented stability create opportunities in other fields of astronomy as well, including spectroscopy. With such Strehl ratios, efficient injection into…
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