nulling interferometry
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2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc-Antoine Martinod ◽  
Barnaby Norris ◽  
Peter Tuthill ◽  
Tiphaine Lagadec ◽  
Nemanja Jovanovic ◽  
...  

AbstractCharacterisation of exoplanets is key to understanding their formation, composition and potential for life. Nulling interferometry, combined with extreme adaptive optics, is among the most promising techniques to advance this goal. We present an integrated-optic nuller whose design is directly scalable to future science-ready interferometric nullers: the Guided-Light Interferometric Nulling Technology, deployed at the Subaru Telescope. It combines four beams and delivers spatial and spectral information. We demonstrate the capability of the instrument, achieving a null depth better than 10−3 with a precision of 10−4 for all baselines, in laboratory conditions with simulated seeing applied. On sky, the instrument delivered angular diameter measurements of stars that were 2.5 times smaller than the diffraction limit of the telescope. These successes pave the way for future design enhancements: scaling to more baselines, improved photonic component and handling low-order atmospheric aberration within the instrument, all of which will contribute to enhance sensitivity and precision.


Author(s):  
T. Lagadec ◽  
B. Norris ◽  
S. Gross ◽  
A. Arriola ◽  
T. Gretzinger ◽  
...  

Abstract In 1978, Bracewell suggested the technique of nulling interferometry to directly image exoplanets which would enable characterisation of their surfaces, atmospheres, weather, and possibly determine their capacity to host life. The contrast needed to discriminate starlight reflected by a terrestrial-type planet from the glare of its host star lies at or beyond a forbidding $10^{-10}$ for an exo-Earth in the habitable zone around a Sun-like star at near-infrared wavelengths, necessitating instrumentation with extremely precise control of the light. Guided Light Interferometric Nulling Technology (GLINT) is a testbed for new photonic devices conceived to overcome the challenges posed by nulling interferometry. At its heart, GLINT employs a single-mode nulling photonic chip fabricated by direct-write technology to coherently combine starlight from an arbitrarily large telescope at 1 550 nm. It operates in combination with an actuated segmented mirror in a closed-loop control system, to produce and sustain a deep null throughout observations. The GLINT South prototype interfaces the 3.9-m Anglo-Australian Telescope and was tested on a sample of bright Mira variable stars. Successful and continuous starlight injection into the photonic chip was achieved. A statistical model of the data was constructed, enabling a data reduction algorithm to retrieve contrast ratios of about $10^{-3}$ . As a byproduct of this analysis, stellar angular diameters that were below the telescope diffraction limit ( $\sim$ 100 mas) were recovered with 1 $\sigma$ accuracy and shown to be in agreement with literature values despite working in the seeing-limited regime. GLINT South serves as a demonstration of the capability of direct-write photonic technology for achieving coherent, stable nulling of starlight, which will encourage further technological developments towards the goal of directly imaging exoplanets with future large ground based and space telescopes.


Author(s):  
Harry-Dean Kenchington Goldsmith ◽  
Michael J. Ireland ◽  
Frantz Martinache ◽  
Nick Cvetojevic ◽  
Stephen J. Madden

Author(s):  
Adrian Gheorghe ◽  
Adrian M. Glauser ◽  
Klaus J. Ergenzinger ◽  
Sascha P. Quanz ◽  
Denis Defrère ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Harry-Dean Kenchington Goldsmith ◽  
Michael J. Ireland ◽  
Steve J. Madden

Author(s):  
Marc-Antoine Martinod ◽  
Barnaby Norris ◽  
Simon Gross ◽  
Alexander Arriola ◽  
Thomas Gretzinger ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 491 (3) ◽  
pp. 4180-4193 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barnaby R M Norris ◽  
Nick Cvetojevic ◽  
Tiphaine Lagadec ◽  
Nemanja Jovanovic ◽  
Simon Gross ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The characterization of exoplanets is critical to understanding planet diversity and formation, their atmospheric composition, and the potential for life. This endeavour is greatly enhanced when light from the planet can be spatially separated from that of the host star. One potential method is nulling interferometry, where the contaminating starlight is removed via destructive interference. The GLINT instrument is a photonic nulling interferometer with novel capabilities that has now been demonstrated in on-sky testing. The instrument fragments the telescope pupil into sub-apertures that are injected into waveguides within a single-mode photonic chip. Here, all requisite beam splitting, routing, and recombination are performed using integrated photonic components. We describe the design, construction, and laboratory testing of our GLINT pathfinder instrument. We then demonstrate the efficacy of this method on sky at the Subaru Telescope, achieving a null-depth precision on sky of ∼10−4 and successfully determining the angular diameter of stars (via their null-depth measurements) to milliarcsecond accuracy. A statistical method for analysing such data is described, along with an outline of the next steps required to deploy this technique for cutting-edge science.


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