The Near Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph for JWST -- V. Kernel Phase Imaging and Data Analysis
Jens Kammerer, Rachel A. Cooper, Thomas Vandal, Deepashri Thatte,, Frantz Martinache, Anand Sivaramakrishnan, Alexander Chaushev, Tomas Stolker,, James P. Lloyd, Lo\"ic Albert, Ren\'e Doyon, Steph Sallum, Marshall D., Perrin, Laurent Pueyo, Antoine M\'erand, Alexandre Gallenne

TL;DR
This paper introduces kernel phase imaging (KPI) analysis for JWST NIRISS data, develops new data processing tools, and demonstrates KPI's effectiveness in detecting close-in companions, showing it is comparable or superior to aperture masking interferometry in certain regimes.
Contribution
The paper presents a new KPI data analysis pipeline, publicly available tools for companion detection, and a comparative performance assessment of KPI and AMI with JWST data.
Findings
KPI successfully detected a close-in companion candidate around CPD-66 562.
KPI achieved high-contrast detection limits comparable to AMI.
KPI is more efficient for faint targets and larger separations (>325 mas).
Abstract
Kernel phase imaging (KPI) enables the direct detection of substellar companions and circumstellar dust close to and below the classical (Rayleigh) diffraction limit. We present a kernel phase analysis of JWST NIRISS full pupil images taken during the instrument commissioning and compare the performance to closely related NIRISS aperture masking interferometry (AMI) observations. For this purpose, we develop and make publicly available the custom "Kpi3Pipeline" enabling the extraction of kernel phase observables from JWST images. The extracted observables are saved into a new and versatile kernel phase FITS file (KPFITS) data exchange format. Furthermore, we present our new and publicly available "fouriever" toolkit which can be used to search for companions and derive detection limits from KPI, AMI, and long-baseline interferometry observations while accounting for correlated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
