Flight mask designs of the Roman Space Telescope Coronagraph Instrument
A J Eldorado Riggs, Dwight Moody, Jessica Gersh-Range, Dan Sirbu,, Ruslan Belikov, Eduardo Bendek, Vanessa P. Bailey, Kunjithapatham, Balasubramanian, Daniel W. Wilson, Scott A. Basinger, John Debes, Tyler D., Groff, N. Jeremy Kasdin, Bertrand Mennesson, Douglas M. Moore

TL;DR
This paper details the design and intended configurations of flight masks for the Roman Space Telescope's Coronagraph Instrument, crucial for high-contrast exoplanet imaging technology demonstration.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the flight coronagraph mask designs and their planned configurations for the Roman Space Telescope's exoplanet imaging mission.
Findings
Complete set of flight coronagraph mask designs described
Configurations include a primary, supported, and unsupported masks
Potential for additional masks to be commissioned post-initial phase
Abstract
Over the past two decades, thousands of confirmed exoplanets have been detected; the next major challenge is to characterize these other worlds and their stellar systems. Much information on the composition and formation of exoplanets and circumstellar debris disks can only be achieved via direct imaging. Direct imaging is challenging because of the small angular separations ( arcsec) and high star-to-planet flux ratios ( for a Jupiter analog or for an Earth analog in the visible). Atmospheric turbulence prohibits reaching such high flux ratios on the ground, so observations must be made above the Earth's atmosphere. The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope (Roman), set to launch in the mid-2020s, will be the first space-based observatory to demonstrate high-contrast imaging with active wavefront control using its Coronagraph Instrument. The instrument's…
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