Abstract

The Magellan Extreme Adaptive Optics (MagAO-X) Instrument is an extreme AO system coming online at the end of 2019 that will be operating within the visible and near-IR. With state-of-the-art wavefront sensing and coronagraphy, MagAO-X will be optimized for high-contrast direct exoplanet imaging at challenging visible wavelengths, particularly Hα. To enable high-contrast imaging, the instrument hosts a vector apodizing phase plate (vAPP) coronagraph. The vAPP creates a static region of high contrast next to the star that is referred to as a dark hole; on MagAO-X, the expected dark hole raw contrast is ∼4 × 10 − 6. The ability to maintain this contrast during observations, however, is limited by the presence of non-common path aberrations (NCPA) and the resulting quasi-static speckles that remain unsensed and uncorrected by the primary AO system. These quasi-static speckles within the dark hole degrade the high contrast achieved by the vAPP and dominate the light from an exoplanet. The aim of our efforts here is to demonstrate two focal plane wavefront sensing (FPWFS) techniques for sensing NCPA and suppressing quasi-static speckles in the final focal plane. To sense NCPA to which the primary AO system is blind, the science image is used as a secondary wavefront sensor. With the vAPP, a static high-contrast dark hole is created on one side of the PSF, leaving the opposite side of the PSF unocculted. In this unobscured region, referred to as the bright field, the relationship between modulations in intensity and low-amplitude pupil plane phase aberrations can be approximated as linear. The bright field can therefore be used as a linear wavefront sensor to detect small NCPA and suppress quasi-static speckles. This technique, known as spatial linear dark field control (LDFC), can monitor the bright field for aberrations that will degrade the high-contrast dark hole. A second form of FPWFS, known as holographic modal wavefront sensing (hMWFS), is also employed with the vAPP. This technique uses hologram-generated PSFs in the science image to monitor the presence of low-order aberrations. With LDFC and the hMWFS, high contrast across the dark hole can be maintained over long observations, thereby allowing planet light to remain visible above the stellar noise over the course of observations on MagAO-X. Here, we present simulations and laboratory demonstrations of both spatial LDFC and the hMWFS with a vAPP coronagraph at the University of Arizona Extreme Wavefront Control Laboratory. We show both in simulation and in the lab that the hMWFS can be used to sense low-order aberrations and reduce the wavefront error (WFE) by a factor of 3 − 4 × . We also show in simulation that, in the presence of a temporally evolving pupil plane phase aberration with 27-nm root-mean-square (RMS) WFE, LDFC can reduce the WFE to 18-nm RMS, resulting in factor of 6 to 10 gain in contrast that is kept stable over time. This performance is also verified in the lab, showing that LDFC is capable of returning the dark hole to the average contrast expected under ideal lab conditions. These results demonstrate the power of the hMWFS and spatial LDFC to improve MagAO-X’s high-contrast imaging capabilities for direct exoplanet imaging.

Highlights

  • One of the key challenges faced by exoplanet direct imaging is the high contrast ratio between the exoplanet and its host star

  • We have demonstrated that the postcoronagraphic science image from a vector apodizing phase plate (vAPP) can be utilized as an focal plane wavefront sensing (FPWFS) to sense low- and high-order aberrations and return the contrast within the dark hole to the expected contrast obtained under ideal conditions

  • By monitoring intensity variations in the Zernike holographic modal wavefront sensing (hMWFS), low-order aberrations can be sensed in the science image and removed by the DM to increase

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Summary

Introduction

One of the key challenges faced by exoplanet direct imaging is the high contrast ratio between the exoplanet and its host star. The aim of our efforts here is to demonstrate the ability of the hMWFS and spatial LDFC to sense and correct quasi-static speckles behind a vAPP coronagraph in the presence of a temporally evolving phase aberration and thereby restore the contrast within the vAPP dark hole to the contrast level expected under ideal conditions. These results will inform our efforts to deploy both techniques on MagAO-X when it comes online at the end of 2019. A version of this hMWFS design containing Zernike modes was selected for the MagAO-X vAPP, and for this reason, the following work focuses solely on the results from this 12 Zernike hMWFS vAPP coronagraph and disregards the other designs on the testplate

Coronagraphic Low-Order Wavefront Sensing with an hMWFS
Simulations of the hMWFS Performance
Laboratory Demonstration of the hMWFS
Linear Dark Field Control with a vAPP
LDFC in Simulation
LDFC Laboratory Demonstration
Findings
Conclusions and the Future of FPWFS on MagAO-X
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