SCExAO, an instrument with a dual purpose: perform cutting-edge science and develop new technologies
Julien Lozi, Olivier Guyon, Nemanja Jovanovic, Sean Goebel, Prashant, Pathak, Nour Skaf, Ananya Sahoo, Barnaby Norris, Frantz Martinache, Mamadou, N'Diaye, Ben Mazin, Alex B. Walter, Peter Tuthill, Tomoyuki Kudo, Hajime, Kawahara, Takayuki Kotani, Michael Ireland

TL;DR
SCExAO is a versatile high-contrast instrument on the Subaru telescope, enabling exoplanet research and technology testing, with recent upgrades including advanced detectors and wavefront control systems for future telescope applications.
Contribution
This paper presents recent upgrades and scientific results of SCExAO, highlighting its dual role in exoplanet science and technology development for next-generation telescopes.
Findings
Successful integration of new wavefront control algorithms
Deployment of the MKIDS Exoplanet Camera for advanced observations
Enhanced capabilities for exoplanet detection and characterization
Abstract
The Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics (SCExAO) instrument is an extremely modular high-contrast instrument installed on the Subaru telescope in Hawaii. SCExAO has a dual purpose. Its position in the northern hemisphere on a 8-meter telescope makes it a prime instrument for the detection and characterization of exoplanets and stellar environments over a large portion of the sky. In addition, SCExAO's unique design makes it the ideal instrument to test innovative technologies and algorithms quickly in a laboratory setup and subsequently deploy them on-sky. SCExAO benefits from a first stage of wavefront correction with the facility adaptive optics AO188, and splits the 600-2400 nm spectrum towards a variety of modules, in visible and near infrared, optimized for a large range of science cases. The integral field spectrograph CHARIS, with its J, H or K-band high-resolution mode…
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