The Single-mode Complex Amplitude Refinement (SCAR) coronagraph: I. Concept, theory and design
E.H. Por, S.Y. Haffert

TL;DR
The paper introduces the SCAR coronagraph, a novel high-contrast imaging technique using single-mode fibers and phase plates, designed for efficient exoplanet detection near bright stars with broad spectral bandwidth and low inner-working angles.
Contribution
It presents the design and theoretical foundation of the SCAR coronagraph, demonstrating its advantages in starlight suppression, bandwidth, and robustness for exoplanet imaging.
Findings
Achieves contrast of <3×10^{-5} at ~1λ/D inner-working angle
Operates over ~20% spectral bandwidth with >50% throughput
Robust against tip-tilt errors (~0.1λ/D rms)
Abstract
The discovery of an Earth-mass exoplanet around the nearby star Proxima Centauri provides a prime target for the search for life on planets outside our solar system. Atmospheric characterization of these planets has been proposed by blocking the starlight with a stellar coronagraph and using a high-resolution spectrograph to search for reflected starlight off the planet. Due to the large flux ratio and small angular separation between Proxima b and its host star ( and respectively; at 750nm for an 8m-class telescope) the coronagraph needs to have a high starlight suppression at low inner-working angles. We aim to find the global optimum of an integrated coronagraphic integral-field spectrograph. We present the Single-mode Complex Amplitude Refinement (SCAR) coronagraph that uses a microlens-fed single-mode fiber array in the focal plane downstream…
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.
