Leonid Pogorelyuk,1 Paul Serra,1 Shreeyam Kacker,1 Sophia Vlahakis,1 Nicholas Belsten,1 Gioia Rau,2 Kenneth G. Carpenter,2 Laurent Pueyo,3 John D. Monnier,4 Ewan S. Douglashttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0813-4308,5 Kerri L. Cahoy1
1Massachusetts Institute of Technology (United States) 2NASA Goddard Space Flight Ctr. (United States) 3Space Telescope Science Institute (United States) 4Univ. of Michigan (United States) 5The Univ. of Arizona (United States)
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The mirrors of astronomical interferometers need to be aligned within a fraction of a wavelength relative to one another. This would be especially challenging for optical instruments with mirrors separated by hundreds of meters flying in Earth’s orbit. However, in this work, we show that this alignment can be achieved by means of: (i) flying the mirror cluster in a particular orbital configuration; (ii) closing a coarse positioning loop using GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System); and (iii) closing a fine wavefront-control loop using light from a laser guide star. The orbital configuration is designed to keep the mirrors passively pointing at the target star (up to a small orbital perturbation) while the interferometer cluster is orbiting and changing its baseline. The laser guide star would be flying in the same orbit but in the opposite direction. In medium- or high-Earth orbit, the interferometer would be able to observe a star for several hours per orbit. In this work, we analyzed the performance of an optical space interferometer consisting of nine 20 cm mirrors mounted on CubeSats and flying 3 km apart (together with a combiner and a laser guide star small satellite). This configuration supports a resolution of 0.04 milliarcseconds - an order of magnitude better than current ground-based interferometers. We estimate the performance of this system imaging stellar surfaces assuming perfect wavefront estimation and control.
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Leonid Pogorelyuk, Paul Serra, Shreeyam Kacker, Sophia Vlahakis, Nicholas Belsten, Gioia Rau, Kenneth G. Carpenter, Laurent Pueyo, John D. Monnier, Ewan S. Douglas, Kerri L. Cahoy, "Laser-guided space interferometer," Proc. SPIE 12183, Optical and Infrared Interferometry and Imaging VIII, 121831E (26 August 2022); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2630605