Coronagraphy for DiRect Imaging of Exoplanets (CIDRE) testbed 1: concept, optical set up, and experimental results of adaptive amplitude apodization
Lucie Leboulleux, Alexis Carlotti, St\'ephane Curaba, Alain, Delboulb\'e, Laurent Jocou, Thibaut Moulin, Laurence Gluck, Marie-H\'el\`ene, Sztefek

TL;DR
This paper introduces the CIDRE testbed designed to develop adaptive amplitude and phase wavefront control techniques for coronagraphs, demonstrating initial experimental results with a digital micro-mirror device for exoplanet imaging.
Contribution
It presents the design, setup, and initial experimental validation of a novel testbed combining a deformable mirror and a DMD for adaptive coronagraphy in exoplanet imaging.
Findings
Successful calibration of the DMD for adaptive amplitude control
First experimental results on adaptive Shaped Pupils with the DMD
Demonstration of dynamic amplitude apodization capabilities
Abstract
Oncoming exoplanet spectro-imagers like the Planetary Camera and Spectrograph (PCS) for the Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) will aim for a new class of exoplanets, including Earth-like planets evolving around M dwarfs i.e., closer than 0.1'' with contrasts around 10^-8. This can be achieved with coronagraphs to modulate the wavefront. Classical coronagraphs are not optimal: 1) they impose a planetary photon loss, which is particularly problematic when the instrument includes a high spectral-resolution spectrograph, 2) some aberrations such as the missing segments of the ELT are dynamic and not compatible with a static coronagraph design, 3) the coupling of the exoplanet image with a fiber for spectroscopy only requires the electric field to be controlled on a small region of the detector. Such instruments would benefit from an adaptive tool to modulate the wavefront in both amplitude…
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