Direct characterization of young giant exoplanets at high spectral resolution by coupling SPHERE and CRIRES+
G. P. P. L. Otten, A. Vigan, E. Muslimov, M. N'Diaye, E. Choquet, U., Seemann, K. Dohlen, M. Houll\'e, P. Cristofari, M. W. Phillips, Y. Charles,, I. Baraffe, J.-L. Beuzit, A. Costille, R. Dorn, M. El Morsy, M. Kasper, M., Lopez, C. Mordasini, R. Pourcelot, A. Reiners

TL;DR
The paper demonstrates that coupling SPHERE and CRIRES+ with HiRISE significantly improves the spectral characterization of young giant exoplanets, especially around bright stars, by reducing stellar noise and increasing detection sensitivity.
Contribution
This study introduces and evaluates the HiRISE fiber coupling system, showing its superior performance over CRIRES+ and existing methods for high-resolution exoplanet spectroscopy.
Findings
HiRISE outperforms CRIRES+ for bright host stars, reducing observing time by up to 16 times.
No coronagraph use yields the best S/N due to higher transmission and starlight suppression.
System transmission is the key factor influencing performance improvements.
Abstract
Studies of atmospheres of directly imaged exoplanets with high-resolution spectrographs have shown that their characterization is predominantly limited by noise on the stellar halo at the location of the studied exoplanet. An instrumental combination of high-contrast imaging and high spectral resolution that suppresses this noise and resolves the spectral lines can therefore yield higher quality spectra. We study the performance of the proposed HiRISE fiber coupling between the SPHERE and CRIRES+ at the VLT for spectral characterization of directly imaged planets. Using end-to-end simulations of HiRISE we determine the S/N of the detection of molecular species for known exoplanets in and bands, and compare them to CRIRES+. We investigate the ultimate detection limits of HiRISE as a function of stellar magnitude, and we quantify the impact of different coronagraphs and of the…
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