Direct imaging and spectroscopy of exoplanets with the ELT/HARMONI high-contrast module
Mathis Houll\'e, Arthur Vigan, Alexis Carlotti, \'Elodie Choquet,, Faustine Cantalloube, Mark W. Phillips, Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Sauvage, Noah, Schwartz, Gilles P. P. L. Otten, Isabelle Baraffe, Alexandre Emsenhuber,, Christoph Mordasini

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the HARMONI instrument on the ELT for direct imaging of exoplanets, demonstrating its high sensitivity and potential to detect faint planets using advanced spectral techniques.
Contribution
It introduces a novel end-to-end simulation of HARMONI's high-contrast capabilities and demonstrates the effectiveness of molecule mapping for exoplanet detection.
Findings
Detects planets above 5-sigma at contrasts up to 16 mag and separations down to 75 mas.
Shows molecule mapping outperforms traditional imaging techniques by 2.5 mag in sensitivity.
Performance remains robust across different host star types and observing conditions.
Abstract
Combining high-contrast imaging with medium-resolution spectroscopy has been shown to significantly boost the direct detection of exoplanets. HARMONI, one of the first-light instruments to be mounted on ESO's ELT, will be equipped with a single-conjugated adaptive optics system to reach the diffraction limit of the ELT in H and K bands, a high-contrast module dedicated to exoplanet imaging, and a medium-resolution (up to R = 17 000) optical and near-infrared integral field spectrograph. Combined together, these systems will provide unprecedented contrast limits at separations between 50 and 400 mas. In this paper, we estimate the capabilities of the HARMONI high-contrast module for the direct detection of young giant exoplanets. We use an end-to-end model of the instrument to simulate observations based on realistic observing scenarios and conditions. We analyze these data with the…
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