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Progress on optical verification for occulter-based high contrast imaging

Author(s): Sirbu, D; Kasdin, NJ; Vanderbei, Robert J.

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Abstract: An external occulter is a specially-shaped spacecraft flown in formation with a telescope. It enables high-contrast imaging of the dim planetary companions of the neighboring solar system by blocking starlight before it reaches the entrance pupil. Occulters have to be designed via optimization methods that account for diffraction to most effectively block starlight. To predict occulter performance, we must verify the fidelity of the optical propagation models under scaled conditions. In this paper, we measure the contrast of a scaled occulter. The validity of the contrast calibration is determined using a baseline circular occulter. We verify contrast better than 10-10, however the measurements do not perform as well as the prediction from theoretical modelling. We attribute this difference to glint scattering off mask edges. © 2013 SPIE.
Publication Date: 25-Mar-2014
Citation: Sirbu, D, Kasdin, NJ, Vanderbei, RJ. "Progress on optical verification for occulter-based high contrast imaging" Proceedings of SPIE 8864, Techniques and Instrumentation for Detection of Exoplanets VI, August 25, 2013, San Diego, California, 2013. doi:10.1117/12.2024488
DOI: doi:10.1117/12.2024488
ISSN: 0277-786X
EISSN: 1996-756X
Type of Material: Conference Article
Series/Report no.: Proceedings of SPIE;886419
Journal/Proceeding Title: Techniques and Instrumentation for Detection of Exoplanets VI, August 25, 2013, San Diego, California
Version: This is the publisher’s version of the article (version of record). All rights reserved to the publisher. Please refer to the publisher's site for terms of use.



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