Paper
25 October 2004 Scintillation effects on a high-contrast imaging instrument for direct detection of exoplanets
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Abstract
A study of the scintillation effects on the PSF halo of the high-contrast imaging instrument (CHEOPS) for direct exo-planet detection from the ground is presented. The fundamental goal of our analysis is to quantify the perturbations induced by the amplitude (scintillation) variations compared to those induced by the phase variations of a perturbed wavefront. Simulations of amplitude and phase screens are obtained for different seeing conditions and for a wavefront propagating at different zenith angles. For all cases a set of simulations of the PSFs in the ideal mirror-limited case (perfect AO-system) and an estimation of the detection limit Δm vs. angular separation obtained with and without scintillation are presented. The whole study is made in I-band (λ = 0.9 μm) i.e. the centered wavelength of the CHEOPS polarimetric imager. A maximum loss of contrast (obtained with and without scintillation) of ~ 25% over a FOV of 5 arcsec is found in the speckle noise-limited regime and of ~ 18% in the photon noise-limited regime. Results are discussed and conditions in which the scintillation effects cannot be neglected are investigated.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Elena Masciadri, Markus Feldt, and Stefan Hippler "Scintillation effects on a high-contrast imaging instrument for direct detection of exoplanets", Proc. SPIE 5490, Advancements in Adaptive Optics, (25 October 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.550402
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KEYWORDS
Scintillation

Wavefronts

Point spread functions

Actuators

Atmospheric propagation

Speckle

Wave propagation

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