A photonic solution to exoplanet direct imaging via nulling interferometry

Date

Authors

Kenchington Goldsmith, Harry-Dean
Ireland, Michael
Madden, Steve

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

SPIE

Abstract

Direct imaging of exoplanets is vital for understanding star system formation and the evolutionary behaviour of exoplanets at large orbits. Typically, imaging a star system to find an exoplanet requires significant attenuation of the host star's high flux in order to detect the much weaker planetary light. The most common method to do this is coronagraphy, which blocks the starlight with an amplitude mask or a null inducing phase mask [1]. An alternative and attractive method is nulling interferometry where light from multiple telescopes are used to simultaneously form a high resolution image (or its Fourier components) and also to form a null in the vicinity of the host star, thereby attenuating it [2]. This has the advantage over coronagraphy that it is not limited to using a single telescope and is thus able to probe deeper into a star system by virtue of the higher resolution available by an interferometric array.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Proceedings Volume 11203, Advances in Optical Astronomical Instrumentation 2019

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Restricted until

Downloads

File
Description