JWST/MIRI coronagraphic performances as measured on-sky
A. Boccaletti, C. Cossou, P. Baudoz, P. O. Lagage, D. Dicken, A., Glasse, D. C. Hines, J. Aguilar, O. Detre, B. Nickson, A. Noriega-Crespo, A., G\'asp\'ar, A. Labiano, C. Stark, D. Rouan, J. M. Reess, G. S. Wright, G., Rieke, M. Garcia Marin

TL;DR
This paper presents the first on-sky contrast measurements of JWST's MIRI coronagraphs, demonstrating their expected performance and potential for exoplanet characterization in the mid-infrared range.
Contribution
It provides the inaugural on-sky contrast data for MIRI's coronagraphs, including the first implementation of the four quadrant phase mask in space.
Findings
Raw contrasts >10^3 at <1'' separation
Contrast improves to ~10^5 beyond 5-6''
Reference star subtraction meets expectations
Abstract
Characterization of directly imaged exoplanets is one of the most eagerly anticipated science functions of the James Webb Space Telescope. MIRI, the mid-IR instrument has the capability to provide unique spatially resolved photometric data points in a spectral range never achieved so far for such objects. We aim to present the very first on-sky contrast measurements of the MIRI's coronagraphs. In addition to a classical Lyot coronagraph at the longest wavelength, this observing mode implements the concept of the four quadrant phase mask for the very first time in a space telescope. We observed single stars together with a series of reference stars to measure raw contrasts as they are delivered on the detector, as well as reference subtracted contrasts. MIRI's coronagraphs achieve raw contrasts greater than at the smallest angular separations (within ) and about …
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