High‐Contrast Imaging from Space: Speckle Nulling in a Low‐Aberration Regime

  • Borde P
  • Traub W
232Citations
Citations of this article
36Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

High-contrast imaging from space must overcome two major noise sources to successfully detect a terrestrial planet angularly close to its parent star: photon noise from diffracted star light, and speckle noise from star light scattered by instrumentally-generated wavefront perturbation. Coronagraphs tackle only the photon noise contribution by reducing diffracted star light at the location of a planet. Speckle noise should be addressed with adaptative-optics systems. Following the tracks of Malbet, Yu and Shao (1995), we develop in this paper two analytical methods for wavefront sensing and control that aims at creating dark holes, i.e. areas of the image plane cleared out of speckles, assuming an ideal coronagraph and small aberrations. The first method, speckle field nulling, is a fast FFT-based algorithm that requires the deformable-mirror influence functions to have identical shapes. The second method, speckle energy minimization, is more general and provides the optimal deformable mirror shape via matrix inversion. With a NxN deformable mirror, the size of matrix to be inverted is either N^2xN^2 in the general case, or only NxN if influence functions can be written as the tensor product of two one-dimensional functions. Moreover, speckle energy minimization makes it possible to trade off some of the dark hole area against an improved contrast. For both methods, complex wavefront aberrations (amplitude and phase) are measured using just three images taken with the science camera (no dedicated wavefront sensing channel is used), therefore there are no non-common path errors. We assess the theoretical performance of both methods with numerical simulations, and find that these speckle nulling techniques should be able to improve the contrast by several orders of magnitude.

References Powered by Scopus

Detection of thermal emission from an extrasolar planet

552Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

A giant planet candidate near a young brown dwarf Direct VLT/NACO observations using IR wavefront sensing

516Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Infrared radiation from an extrasolar planet

459Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Cited by Powered by Scopus

The subaru coronagraphic extreme adaptive optics system: Enabling high-contrast imaging on solar-system scales

376Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Theoretical limits on extrasolar terrestrial planet detection with coronagraphs

306Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Fundamental limitations of high contrast imaging set by small sample statistics

262Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Borde, P. J., & Traub, W. A. (2006). High‐Contrast Imaging from Space: Speckle Nulling in a Low‐Aberration Regime. The Astrophysical Journal, 638(1), 488–498. https://doi.org/10.1086/498669

Readers over time

‘10‘11‘12‘13‘14‘16‘17‘18‘19‘20‘21‘2202468

Readers' Seniority

Tooltip

PhD / Post grad / Masters / Doc 17

61%

Researcher 8

29%

Professor / Associate Prof. 3

11%

Readers' Discipline

Tooltip

Physics and Astronomy 18

56%

Engineering 12

38%

Medicine and Dentistry 1

3%

Social Sciences 1

3%

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free
0