Performance of near-infrared high-contrast imaging methods with JWST from commissioning
Jens Kammerer, Julien Girard, Aarynn L. Carter, Marshall D. Perrin,, Rachel Cooper, Deepashri Thatte, Thomas Vandal, Jarron Leisenring, Jason, Wang, William O. Balmer, Anand Sivaramakrishnan, Laurent Pueyo, Kimberly, Ward-Duong, Ben Sunnquist, J\'ea Adams Redai

TL;DR
This study evaluates JWST's high-contrast imaging capabilities in the 3-5 micron range during commissioning, demonstrating its near-expected performance in detecting faint companions at various angular separations using multiple advanced techniques.
Contribution
The paper introduces custom tools for simulating and analyzing JWST coronagraphy data and provides the first on-sky performance assessment of several high-contrast imaging methods during commissioning.
Findings
NIRISS AMI and KPI reach 7-8 mag contrast at 70 mas
NIRCam coronagraphy achieves 13-15 mag contrast beyond 250 mas
JWST high-contrast imaging performs close to predicted limits during commissioning
Abstract
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) will revolutionize the field of high-contrast imaging and enable both the direct detection of Saturn-mass planets and the characterization of substellar companions in the mid-infrared. While JWST will feature unprecedented sensitivity, angular resolution will be the key factor when competing with ground-based telescopes. Here, we aim to characterize the performance of several extreme angular resolution imaging techniques available with JWST in the 3-5 micron regime based on data taken during commissioning. Firstly, we introduce custom tools to simulate, reduce, and analyze NIRCam and MIRI coronagraphy data and use these tools to extract companion detection limits from on-sky NIRCam round and bar mask coronagraphy observations. Secondly, we present on-sky NIRISS aperture masking interferometry (AMI) and kernel phase imaging (KPI) observations from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
