Archive | 2021

High contrast imaging with MEMS deformable mirrors in the Decadal Survey Testbed

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Deformable mirrors (DMs) are an essential part of any coronagraphic, high contrast instrument. They mitigate optical aberrations in the system and can even be used to generate contrast for the coronagraph. MEMS DMs from Boston Micromachines have been selected as the baseline for two flagship space telescopes proposed to the 2020 Decadal Survey. Although MEMS DMs have over a decade of heritage on ground-based telescopes and in in-air testbeds around the globe, they have not been tested in vacuum down to the ∼10−10 contrast level needed to image terrestrial exoplanets. In this paper, we describe vacuum tests of MEMS DMs in the Decadal Survey Testbed at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The first challenge was a bright, temporally incoherent signal, which was identified as electronics noise and removed with a low-pass filter. After that, the contrast has been limited in broadband light by the strong print-through on the DM surfaces. We performed numerical simulations to confirm that conclusion and to characterize the improvements needed to the MEMS DM surfaces and the testbed layout to attain our goal of 10−10 contrast. Keywords: deformable mirror, coronagraph

Volume 11823
Pages 118230S - 118230S-9
DOI 10.1117/12.2593459
Language English
Journal None

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