Cophasing the Planet Formation Imager
Romain G. Petrov, Abdelkarim Boskri, Thami Elhalkouj, John Monnier,, Michael Ireland, Stefan Kraus

TL;DR
The paper explores innovative cophasing architectures for the Planet Formation Imager, aiming to reduce aperture sizes and costs while maintaining high-resolution imaging capabilities in the thermal infrared.
Contribution
It analyzes various cophasing strategies and proposes a hierarchical fringe tracking approach to enable affordable, smaller apertures for PFI.
Findings
Hierarchical Fringe Tracking with two-beam spatial filters is most promising.
Conventional fringe sensing methods require prohibitively large telescopes.
Affordable apertures smaller than 2 meters are feasible with proposed strategies.
Abstract
The Planet Formation Imager (PFI) is a project for a very large optical interferometer intended to obtain images of the planet formation process at scales as small as the Hill sphere of giant exoplanets. Its main science instruments will work in the thermal infrared but it will be cophased in the near infrared, where it requires also some capacity for scientific imaging. PFI imaging and resolution specifications imply an array of 12 to 20 apertures and baselines up to a few kilometers cophased at near infrared coherent magnitudes as large as 10. This paper discusses various cophasing architectures and the corresponding minimum diameter of individual apertures, which is the dominant element of PFI cost estimates. From a global analysis of the possible combinations of pairwise fringe sensors, we show that conventional approaches used in current interferometers imply the use of…
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