Phase II of the Keck Planet Imager and Characterizer: system-level laboratory characterization and preliminary on-sky commissioning
Daniel Echeverri, Nemanja Jovanovic, Jacques-Robert Delorme, Yinzi, Xin, Tobias Schofield, Luke Finnerty, Jason J. Wang, Jerry Xuan, Dimitri, Mawet, Ashley Baker, Randall Bartos, Charlotte Z. Bond, Marta L. Bryan,, Benjamin Calvin, Sylvain Cetre, Greg Doppmann

TL;DR
The paper reports on the system-level laboratory testing, characterization, and initial on-sky commissioning of Phase II upgrades for the Keck Planet Imager and Characterizer, enhancing exoplanet spectroscopy capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces new hardware upgrades including a deformable mirror and vortex coronagraph, and provides detailed performance metrics and initial on-sky results for the upgraded system.
Findings
High throughput and stability demonstrated in lab tests
Successful initial on-sky commissioning results
Enhanced exoplanet detection capabilities with new modes
Abstract
The Keck Planet Imager and Characterizer (KPIC) is a series of upgrades for the Keck II Adaptive Optics (AO) system and the NIRSPEC spectrograph to enable diffraction-limited, high-resolution () spectroscopy of exoplanets and low-mass companions in the K and L bands. Phase I consisted of single-mode fiber injection/extraction units (FIU/FEU) used in conjunction with an H-band pyramid wavefront sensor. Phase II, deployed and commissioned in 2022, adds a 1000-actuator deformable mirror, beam-shaping optics, a vortex coronagraph, and other upgrades to the FIU/FEU. The use of single-mode fibers provides a gain in stellar rejection, a substantial reduction in sky background, and an extremely stable line-spread function on the spectrograph. In this paper we present the results of extensive system-level laboratory testing and characterization showing the instrument's Phase II…
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