High spatial resolution spectral imaging method for space interferometers and its application to formation-flying small satellites
Taro Matsuo, Satoshi Ikari, Hirotaka Kondo, Sho Ishiwata, Shinichi, Nakasuka, Tomoyasu Yamamuro

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel spectral imaging beam combiner for space interferometers, enabling high-resolution imaging with formation-flying small satellites, validated through simulations of solar system objects.
Contribution
The paper proposes a new densified pupil spectroscopic technique for space interferometers that allows direct measurement of complex amplitudes without scanning, suitable for formation-flying small satellites.
Findings
Validated method through simulation of Europa's reflected light
Potential for high-resolution imaging of solar system objects
Limitations due to spectral structure affecting amplitude extraction
Abstract
Infrared space interferometers can surpass the spatial resolution limitations of single-dish space telescopes. However, stellar interferometers from space have not been realized because of technical difficulties. Two beams coming from individual satellites separated by more than a few tens of meters should precisely interfere such that the optical-path and angular differences between the two beams are reduced at the wavelength level. Herein, we propose a novel beam combiner for space interferometers that records the spectrally-resolved interferometric fringes using the densified pupil spectroscopic technique. As the detector plane is optically conjugated to a plane, on which the two beams interfere, we can directly measure the relative phase difference between the two beams. Additionally, when an object within the field of view is obtained with a modest signal-to-noise ratio, we can…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptical Polarization and Ellipsometry · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
