The path towards high-contrast imaging with the VLTI: the Hi-5 project
D. Defr\`ere, O. Absil, J.-P. Berger, T. Boulet, W.C. Danchi, S., Ertel, A. Gallenne, F. H\'enault, P. Hinz, E. Huby, M. Ireland, S. Kraus, L., Labadie, J.-B. Le Bouquin, G. Martin, A. Matter, A. M\'erand, B. Mennesson,, S. Minardi, J. Monnier, B. Norris, G. Orban de Xivry

TL;DR
This paper explores advancing the VLTI's high-contrast imaging capabilities, aiming to achieve contrasts of 10^-4 or better, to enable detailed studies of exoplanets, stellar physics, and extragalactic phenomena.
Contribution
It proposes using integrated optics in the thermal near-infrared to significantly improve contrast, expanding VLTI's scientific applications.
Findings
Review of current high-contrast interferometry techniques
Proposal to implement integrated optics in the 3-5 μm range
Discussion of science cases including exoplanets and active galactic nuclei
Abstract
The development of high-contrast capabilities has long been recognized as one of the top priorities for the VLTI. As of today, the VLTI routinely achieves contrasts of a few 10 in the near-infrared with PIONIER (H band) and GRAVITY (K band). Nulling interferometers in the northern hemisphere and non-redundant aperture masking experiments have, however, demonstrated that contrasts of at least a few 10 are within reach using specific beam combination and data acquisition techniques. In this paper, we explore the possibility to reach similar or higher contrasts on the VLTI. After reviewing the state-of-the-art in high-contrast infrared interferometry, we discuss key features that made the success of other high-contrast interferometric instruments (e.g., integrated optics, nulling, closure phase, and statistical data reduction) and address possible avenues to improve the…
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