Asgard/NOTT: L-band nulling interferometry at the VLTI -- III. The mid-infrared integrated optics beam combiner for NOTT
A. Sanny (1,2,3), L. Labadie (1), S. Gross (2,5), K. Barjot (1), R. Laugier (4), G. Garreau (4), M.-A. Martinod (4), D. Defr\`ere (4), M. J. Withford (2),((1) I. Physikalisches Institut, Universit\"at zu K\"oln, K\"oln, Germany, (2) MQ Photonics Research Centre

TL;DR
This paper reports the development and laboratory characterization of a mid-infrared four-telescope integrated optics beam combiner for the VLTI, achieving broadband nulling suitable for exozodiacal dust and exoplanet studies.
Contribution
First demonstration of a broadband L' deep null with a four-telescope integrated optics beam combiner in the mid-infrared.
Findings
Achieved a total throughput of 37% including Fresnel losses.
Measured an average raw null of 8.13×10⁻³ and a self-calibrated null of 1.14×10⁻³.
Successfully reproduced a theta^6 broad null in laboratory conditions.
Abstract
The NOTT visitor instrument at the VLTI will characterize hot exozodiacal dust and young Jupiter-like planets at the water snowline via L' band nulling interferometry. The beam combination will be achieved by a four-telescope integrated optics beam combiner (IOBC) that fulfills specific requirements. Our goal was to manufacture the mid-infrared IOBC for NOTT based on the double-Bracewell architecture and run a detailed laboratory characterization in the L' band. We focus on the achievable raw and self-calibrated nulling ratios. We use a double Michelson interferometer to produce four broadband coherent beams simulating the four telescopes of the VLTI and perform broadband nulling at room temperature. We analyze the modal, chromatic, and polarization behavior of the IOBC, and measure its total throughput. We were able to manufacture a single-mode four-telescope double-Bracewell IOBC in…
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.
