Application of Adaptive Optics for Illumination Stability in Precision Radial Velocity Measurements in Astronomical Spectroscopy
Alexandre J. T. S. Mello, Antonin H. Bouchez, Andrew Szentgyorgyi,, Marcos A. van Dam, Henrique Lupinari

TL;DR
This paper models how adaptive optics can enhance illumination stability in astronomical spectrographs, potentially enabling more precise exoplanet measurements and atmospheric studies with extremely large telescopes.
Contribution
It provides detailed simulations of AO's impact on spectrograph stability, proposing a modified AO system for improved performance in exoplanet research.
Findings
AO improves image stability in spectrographs.
Enhanced stability aids in exoplanet mass measurement.
Potential for detecting biomarkers in exoplanet atmospheres.
Abstract
Adaptive optics (AO) have been used to correct wavefronts to achieve diffraction limited point spread functions in a broad range of optical applications, prominently ground-based astronomical telescopes operating in near infra-red. While most AO systems cannot provide diffraction-limited performance in the optical passband (400 nm - 900 nm), AO can improve image concentration, as well as both near and far field image stability, within an AO-fed spectrograph. Enhanced near and far field stability increase wavelength-scale stability in high dispersion spectrographs. In this work, we describe detailed modelling of the stability improvements achievable on extremely large telescopes. These improvements in performance may enable the mass measurement of Earth Twins by the precision radial velocity method, and the discovery of evidence of exobiotic activity in exoplanet atmospheres with the…
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