An on-chip astrophotonic spectrograph with a resolving power of 12,000
Pradip Gatkine, Nemanja Jovanovic, Jeffrey Jewell, J. Kent Wallace,, and Dimitri Mawet

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a compact, high-resolution astrophotonic spectrograph on a chip using SiN technology, achieving a resolving power of 12,000 over a broad infrared band, suitable for advanced astronomical applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel high-resolution AWG spectrograph on a SiN chip with a small footprint and high throughput, advancing miniaturized astrophotonic instrumentation.
Findings
Achieved a resolving power of ~12,000.
Operates over 1200-1700 nm band.
On-chip throughput of ~40%, overall ~11%.
Abstract
With the upcoming extremely large telescopes (ELTs), the volume, mass, and cost of the associated spectrographs will scale with the telescope diameter. Astrophotonics offers a unique solution to this problem in the form of single-mode fiber-fed diffraction-limited spectrographs on a chip. These highly miniaturized chips offer great flexibility in terms of coherent manipulation of photons. Such photonic spectrographs are well-suited to disperse the light from directly imaged planets (post-coronagraph, collected using a single-mode fiber) to characterize exoplanet atmospheres. Here we present the results from a proof-of-concept high-resolution astrophotonic spectrograph using the arrayed waveguide gratings (AWG) architecture. This chip uses the low-loss SiN platform (SiN core, SiO cladding) with square waveguides (800 nm 800 nm). The AWG has a measured resolving power…
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