Instrumental Polarization in Stellar Coronagraphy: Coherent Behavior and its Implications for Dark Hole Optimization
Richard A. Frazin

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that instrumental polarization in stellar coronagraphs is fully coherent with the input light, and that dark hole creation can reduce secondary polarization effects, impacting design and modulation strategies for high-contrast imaging.
Contribution
It reveals the coherent nature of secondary polarization and its mitigation through dark hole creation, offering new insights for coronagraph design.
Findings
Secondary polarization is fully coherent with the input field.
Dark hole creation significantly reduces secondary intensity.
Implications for polarization design and modulation schemes.
Abstract
Stellar coronagraphs designed for high-contrast imaging of exoplanets inevitably introduce a small amount of instrumental polarization, called \emph{secondary polarization}. At the contrast levels required to detect and characterize terrestrial planets, these effects may become significant. Instrumentally induced polarization is often referred to as ``incoherent," yet this use of the term lacks rigor. This work uses Jones calculus and vector field simulations, including interactions with dielectric surfaces to show that the secondary polarization is fully coherent with the input field, but it does not interfere with it due to orthogonality. A key consequence of the coherence secondary polarization is that the process of creating a dark hole in the primary polarization tends to also significantly mitigate the intensity corresponding to the secondary polarization, called the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
