Reference-star differential imaging on SPHERE/IRDIS
Chen Xie, Elodie Choquet, Arthur Vigan, Faustine Cantalloube, Myriam, Benisty, Anthony Boccaletti, Mickael Bonnefoy, Celia Desgrange, Antonio, Garufi, Julien Girard, Janis Hagelberg, Markus Janson, Matthew Kenworthy,, Anne-Marie Lagrange, Maud Langlois, Fran\c{c}ois Menard

TL;DR
This study evaluates the effectiveness of reference-star differential imaging (RDI) on SPHERE/IRDIS data, demonstrating its advantages over ADI at small angular separations and showing how archival data can optimize stellar subtraction for exoplanet and disk imaging.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive RDI approach using archival data to enhance high-contrast imaging performance on ground-based telescopes, with practical recommendations for future observations.
Findings
RDI outperforms ADI at separations <0.4" under median conditions.
Including more reference targets improves RDI performance.
RDI reveals more disk features and detects disks not seen with ADI.
Abstract
Reference-star differential imaging (RDI) is a promising technique in high-contrast imaging that is thought to be more sensitive to exoplanets and disks than angular differential imaging (ADI) at short angular separations (i.e., <0.3"). However, it is unknown whether the performance of RDI on ground-based instruments can be improved by using all the archival data to optimize the subtraction of stellar contributions. We characterize the performance of RDI on SPHERE/IRDIS data in direct imaging of exoplanets and disks. We made use of all the archival data in H23 obtained by SPHERE/IRDIS in the past five years to build a master reference library and perform RDI. In the point-source detection, RDI can outperform ADI at small angular separations (<0.4") if the observing conditions are around the median conditions of our master reference library. On average, RDI has a gain of ~0.8 mag over…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
