Laboratory and On-Sky Validation of the Shaped Pupil Coronagraph's Sensitivity to Low-Order Aberrations With Active Wavefront Control
Thayne Currie, N. Jeremy Kasdin, Tyler Groff, Julien Lozi, Nemanja, Jovanovic, Olivier Guyon, Timothy Brandt, Frantz Martinache, Jeffery, Chilcote, Nour Skaf, Jonas Kuhn, Prashant Patak, Tomoyuki Kudo

TL;DR
This study validates the robustness of the shaped pupil coronagraph (SPC) against low-order aberrations through laboratory and on-sky tests, showing its potential for future exoplanet imaging despite current design limitations.
Contribution
The paper provides the first extensive on-sky validation of the SPC's performance and robustness to low-order aberrations, demonstrating its suitability for future high-contrast imaging.
Findings
SPC degrades more slowly than Lyot coronagraph under low-order aberrations.
SPC maintains better contrast performance than Lyot at lower Strehl ratios.
Detection of HR 8799 planets with comparable S/N to vortex coronagraph.
Abstract
We present early laboratory simulations and extensive on-sky tests validating of the performance of a shaped pupil coronagraph (SPC) behind an extreme-AO corrected beam of the Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics (SCExAO) system. In tests with the SCExAO internal source/wavefront error simulator, the normalized intensity profile for the SPC degrades more slowly than for the Lyot coronagraph as low-order aberrations reduce the Strehl ratio from extremely high values (S.R. 0.93--0.99) to those characteristic of current ground-based extreme AO systems (S.R. 0.74--0.93) and then slightly lower values down to S.R. 0.57. On-sky SCExAO data taken with the SPC and other coronagraphs for brown dwarf/planet-hosting stars HD 1160 and HR 8799 provide further evidence for the SPC's robustness to low-order aberrations. From H-band Strehl ratios of 80% to 70%, the Lyot…
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