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SFADI: the Speckle-Free Angular Differential Imaging method

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 Publication date 2017
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We present a new processing technique aimed at significantly improving the angular differential imaging method (ADI) in the context of high-contrast imaging of faint objects nearby bright stars in observations obtained with extreme adaptive optics (EXAO) systems. This technique, named SFADI for Speckle-Free ADI, allows to improve the achievable contrast by means of speckles identification and suppression. This is possible in very high cadence data, which freeze the atmospheric evolution. Here we present simulations in which synthetic planets are injected into a real millisecond frame rate sequence, acquired at the LBT telescope at visible wavelength, and show that this technique can deliver low and uniform background, allowing unambiguous detection of $10^{-5}$ contrast planets, from $100$ to $300$ mas separations, under poor and highly variable seeing conditions ($0.8$ to $1.5$ arcsec FWHM) and in only $20$ min of acquisition. A comparison with a standard ADI approach shows that the contrast limit is improved by a factor of $5$. We extensively discuss the SFADI dependence on the various parameters like speckle identification threshold, frame integration time, and number of frames, as well as its ability to provide high-contrast imaging for extended sources, and also to work with fast acquisitions.



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Residual speckles due to aberrations arising from optical errors after the split between the wavefront sensor and the science camera path are the most significant barriers to imaging extrasolar planets. While speckles can be suppressed using the science camera in conjunction with the deformable mirror, this requires knowledge of the phase of the electric field in the focal plane. We describe a method which combines a coronagraph with a simple phase-shifting interferometer to measure and correct speckles in the full focal plane. We demonstrate its initial use on the Stellar Double Coronagraph at the Palomar Observatory. We also describe how the same hardware can be used to distinguish speckles from true companions by measuring the coherence of the optical field in the focal plane. We present results observing the brown dwarf HD 49197b with this technique, demonstrating the ability to detect the presence of a companion even when it is buried in the speckle noise, without the use of any standard calibration techniques. We believe this is the first detection of a substellar companion using the coherence properties of light.
Optical stellar interferometers have demonstrated milli-arcsecond resolution with few apertures spaced hundreds of meters apart. To obtain rich direct images, many apertures will be needed, for a better sampling of the incoming wavefront. The coherent imaging thus achievable improves the sensitivity with respect to the incoherent combination of successive fringed exposures. Efficient use of highly diluted apertures for coherent imaging can be done with pupil densification, a technique also called hypertelescope imaging. Although best done with adaptive phasing, concentrating most energy in a dominant interference peak for a rich direct image of a complex source, such imaging is also possible with random phase errors such as caused by turbulent seeing, using methods such as speckle imaging which uses several short exposure images to reconstruct the true image. We have simulated such observations using an aperture which changes through the night, as naturally happens on Earth with fixed grounded mirror elements, and find that reconstructed images of star clusters and extended objects are of high quality. As part of the study we also estimated the required photon levels for achieving a good signal to noise ratio using such a technique.
The angular differential imaging (ADI) is used to improve contrast in high resolution astronomical imaging. An example is the direct imaging of exoplanet in camera fed by Extreme Adaptive Optics. The subtraction of the main dazzling object to observe the faint companion was improved using Principal Component Analysis (PCA). It factorizes the positive astronomical frames into positive and negative components. On the contrary, the Nonnegative Matrix Factorization (NMF) uses only positive components, mimicking the actual composition of the long exposure images.
429 - Romain Laugier 2020
To reach its optimal performance, Fizeau interferometry requires that we work to resolve instrumental biases through calibration. One common technique used in high contrast imaging is angular differential imaging, which calibrates the point spread function and flux leakage using a rotation in the focal plane. Our aim is to experimentally demonstrate and validate the efficacy of an angular differential kernel-phase approach, a new method for self-calibrating interferometric observables that operates similarly to angular differential imaging, while retaining their statistical properties. We used linear algebra to construct new observables that evolve outside of the subspace spanned by static biases. On-sky observations of a binary star with the SCExAO instrument at the Subaru telescope were used to demonstrate the practicality of this technique. We used a classical approach on the same data to compare the effectiveness of this method. The proposed method shows smaller and more Gaussian residuals compared to classical calibration methods, while retaining compatibility with the statistical tools available. We also provide a measurement of the stability of the SCExAO instrument that is relevant to the application of the technique. Angular differential kernel phases provide a reliable method for calibrating biased observables. Although the sensitivity at small separations is reduced for small field rotations, the calibration is effectively improved and the number of subjective choices is reduced.
75 - Steven P. Bos 2020
Photometric and astrometric monitoring of directly imaged exoplanets will deliver unique insights into their rotational periods, the distribution of cloud structures, weather, and orbital parameters. As the host star is occulted by the coronagraph, a speckle grid (SG) is introduced to serve as astrometric and photometric reference. Speckle grids are implemented as diffractive pupil-plane optics that generate artificial speckles at known location and brightness. Their performance is limited by the underlying speckle halo caused by evolving uncorrected wavefront errors. The speckle halo will interfere with the coherent SGs, affecting their photometric and astrometric precision. Our aim is to show that by imposing opposite amplitude or phase modulation on the opposite polarization states, a SG can be instantaneously incoherent with the underlying halo, greatly increasing the precision. We refer to these as vector speckle grids (VSGs). We derive analytically the mechanism by which the incoherency arises and explore the performance gain in idealised simulations under various atmospheric conditions. We show that the VSG is completely incoherent for unpolarized light and that the fundamental limiting factor is the cross-talk between the speckles in the grid. In simulation, we find that for short-exposure images the VSG reaches a $sim$0.3-0.8% photometric error and $sim$$3-10cdot10^{-3}$ $lambda/D$ astrometric error, which is a performance increase of a factor $sim$20 and $sim$5, respectively. Furthermore, we outline how VSGs could be implemented using liquid-crystal technology to impose the geometric phase on the circular polarization states. The VSG is a promising new method for generating a photometric and astrometric reference SG that has a greatly increased astrometric and photometric precision.
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