The Mysterious Lives Of Speckles. I. Residual atmospheric speckle lifetimes in ground-based coronagraphs
Jared R. Males, Michael P. Fitzgerald, Ruslan Belikov, Olivier Guyon

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new PSD method to analyze residual atmospheric speckle lifetimes in high-contrast imaging, revealing how adaptive optics control influences speckle behavior and implications for optimizing ground-based telescopes.
Contribution
The paper develops a novel PSD-based approach for calculating speckle lifetimes and predicts their behavior across different telescope systems and conditions, aiding in high-contrast imaging optimization.
Findings
AO control reduces speckle lifetime from ~130 ms to ~50 ms.
Predictive control further shortens lifetime to ~20 ms on 6.5 m telescopes.
Speckle lifetime varies with system parameters and observing conditions.
Abstract
High-contrast imaging observations are fundamentally limited by the spatially and temporally correlated noise source called speckles. Suppression of speckle noise is the key goal of wavefront control and adaptive optics (AO), coronagraphy, and a host of post-processing techniques. Speckles average at a rate set by the statistical speckle lifetime, and speckle-limited integration time in long exposures is directly proportional to this lifetime. As progress continues in post-coronagraph wavefront control, residual atmospheric speckles will become the limiting noise source in high-contrast imaging, so a complete understanding of their statistical behavior is crucial to optimizing high-contrast imaging instruments. Here we present a novel power spectral density (PSD) method for calculating the lifetime, and develop a semi-analytic method for predicting intensity PSDs behind a coronagraph.…
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