Paper
27 July 2016 Speckle lifetime in XAO coronagraphic images: temporal evolution of SPHERE coronagraphic images
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The major source of noise in high-contrast imaging is the presence of slowly evolving speckles that do not average with time. The temporal stability of the point-spread-function (PSF) is therefore critical to reach a high contrast with extreme adaptive optics (XAO) instruments. Understanding on which timescales the PSF evolves and what are the critical parameters driving the speckle variability allow to design an optimal observing strategy and data reduction technique to calibrate instrumental aberrations and reveal faint astrophysical sources. We have obtained a series of 52 min, AO-corrected, coronagraphically occulted, high-cadence (1.6Hz), H-band images of the star HR 3484 with the SPHERE (Spectro-Polarimeter High-contrast Exoplanet REsearch1) instrument on the VLT. This is a unique data set from an XAO instrument to study its stability on timescales as short as one second and as long as several tens of minutes. We find different temporal regimes of decorrelation. We show that residuals from the atmospheric turbulence induce a fast, partial decorrelation of the PSF over a few seconds, before a transition to a regime with a linear decorrelation with time, at a rate of several tens parts per million per second (ppm/s). We analyze the spatial dependence of this decorrelation within the well-corrected radius of the adaptive optics system and show that the linear decorrelation is faster at short separations. Last, we investigate the influence of the distance to the meridian on the decorrelation.
© (2016) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
J. Milli, T. Banas, D. Mouillet, D. Mawet, J. H. Girard, A. Vigan, A. Boccaletti, M. Kasper, Zahed Wahhaj, A. M. Lagrange, J.-L. Beuzit, T. Fusco, J.-F. Sauvage, and R. Galicher "Speckle lifetime in XAO coronagraphic images: temporal evolution of SPHERE coronagraphic images", Proc. SPIE 9909, Adaptive Optics Systems V, 99094Z (27 July 2016); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2231703
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 11 scholarly publications.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Coronagraphy

Sensors

Adaptive optics

Adaptive optics

Stars

Optical spheres

Optical spheres

Back to Top