Broadband vortex fiber nulling: high-dispersion exoplanet science at the diffraction limit
Daniel Echeverri, Garreth Ruane, Nemanja Jovanovic, Jacques-Robert, Delorme, Jason Wang, Maxwell A. Millar-Blanchaer, Jerry Xuan, Katie Toman,, Dimitri Mawet

TL;DR
This paper introduces Broadband Vortex Fiber Nulling (VFN), a novel high-dispersion technique enabling direct spectral characterization of exoplanets at the diffraction limit, bridging the gap between traditional methods and expanding observational capabilities.
Contribution
The paper presents a polychromatic validation of VFN with high null depth and discusses deployment plans for the Keck KPIC instrument, advancing exoplanet observation techniques.
Findings
Achieved nulls of <10^{-4} across 15% bandwidth in lab tests.
Demonstrated VFN's potential for detecting and characterizing exoplanets.
Outlined future deployment and on-sky demonstration plans.
Abstract
As the number of confirmed exoplanets continues to grow, there is an increased push to spectrally characterize them to determine their atmospheric composition, formation paths, rotation rates, and habitability. However, there is a large population of known exoplanets that either do not transit their star or have been detected via the radial velocity (RV) method at very small angular separations such that they are inaccessible to traditional coronagraph systems. Vortex Fiber Nulling (VFN) is a new single-aperture interferometric technique that uses the entire telescope pupil to bridge the gap between traditional coronagraphy and RV or Transit methods by enabling the direct observation and spectral characterization of targets at and within the diffraction limit. By combining a vortex mask with a single mode fiber, the on-axis starlight is rejected while the off-axis planet light is…
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