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Dive into the research topics where Brian Kern is active.

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Featured researches published by Brian Kern.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2007

Broadband wavefront correction algorithm for high-contrast imaging systems

Amir Give'on; Brian Kern; Stuart B. Shaklan; Dwight Moody; Laurent Pueyo

Great strides have been made in recent years toward the goal of high-contrast imaging with a sensitivity adequate to detect earth-like planets around nearby stars. It appears that the hardware − optics, coronagraph masks, deformable mirrors, illumination systems, thermal control systems − are up to the task of obtaining the required 10-10 contrast. But in broadband light (e.g., 10% bandpass) the wavefront control algorithms have been a limiting factor. In this paper we describe a general correction methodology that works in broadband light with one or multiple deformable mirrors by conjugating the electric field in a predefined region in the image where terrestrial planets would be found. We describe the linearized approach and demonstrate its effectiveness through laboratory experiments. This paper presents results from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory High Contrast Imaging Testbed (HCIT) for both narrow-band light (2%) and broadband light (10%) correction.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2003

Optical Pulse-Phased Photopolarimetry of PSR B0656+14

Brian Kern; Crystal L. Martin; Benjamin A. Mazin; J. P. Halpern

We have observed the optical pulse profile of PSR B0656+14 in 10 phase bins at a high signal-to-noise ratio, and have measured the linear polarization profile over 30% of the pulsar period with some significance. The pulse profile is double-peaked, with a bridge of emission between the two peaks, similar to gamma-ray profiles observed in other pulsars. There is no detectable unpulsed flux, to a 1 σ limit of 16% of the pulse-averaged flux. The emission in the bridge is highly (~100%) polarized, with a position angle sweep in excellent agreement with the prediction of the rotating vector model (RVM) as determined from radio polarization observations. We are able to account for the gross features of the optical light curve (i.e., the phase separation of the peaks) using both polar cap and outer gap models. Using the polar cap model, we are also able to estimate the height of the optical emission regions.


Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems | 2015

Demonstration of high contrast with an obscured aperture with the WFIRST-AFTA shaped pupil coronagraph

Eric Cady; Camilo Mejia Prada; Xin An; Kunjithapatham Balasubramanian; Rosemary T. Diaz; N. Jeremy Kasdin; Brian Kern; Andreas Kuhnert; Bijan Nemati; Ilya Poberezhskiy; A. J. Eldorado Riggs; Robert P. Zimmer; Neil Zimmerman

Abstract. The coronagraph instrument on the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Telescope-Astrophysics-Focused Telescope Asset (WFIRST-AFTA) mission study has two coronagraphic architectures, shaped pupil and hybrid Lyot, which may be interchanged for use in different observing scenarios. Each architecture relies on newly developed mask components to function in the presence of the AFTA aperture, and so both must be matured to a high technology readiness level in advance of the mission. A series of milestones were set to track the development of the technologies required for the instrument; we report on completion of WFIRST-AFTA coronagraph milestone 2—a narrowband 10−8 contrast test with static aberrations for the shaped pupil—and the plans for the upcoming broadband coronagraph milestone 5.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2007

Demonstration of high contrast in 10% broadband light with the shaped pupil coronagraph

Ruslan Belikov; Amir Give'on; Brian Kern; Eric Cady; Michael A. Carr; Stuart B. Shaklan; Kunjithapatham Balasubramanian; Victor White; Pierre M. Echternach; Matt Dickie; John T. Trauger; Andreas Kuhnert; N. Jeremy Kasdin

The Shaped Pupil Coronagraph (SPC) is a high-contrast imaging system pioneered at Princeton for detection of extra-solar earthlike planets. It is designed to achieve 10-10 contrast at an inner working angle of 4λ/D in broadband light. A critical requirement in attaining this contrast level in practice is the ability to control wavefront phase and amplitude aberrations to at least λ/104 in rms phase and 1/1000 rms amplitude, respectively. Furthermore, this has to be maintained over a large spectral band. The High Contrast Imaging Testbed (HCIT) at the Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) is a state-of-the-art facility for studying such high contrast imaging systems and wavefront control methods. It consists of a vacuum chamber containing a configurable coronagraph setup with a Xinetics deformable mirror. Previously, we demonstrated 4x10-8 contrast with the SPC at HCIT in 10% broadband light. The limiting factors were subsequently identified as (1) manufacturing defects due to minimal feature size constraints on our shaped pupil masks and (2) the inefficiency of the wavefront correction algorithm we used (classical speckle nulling) to correct for these defects. In this paper, we demonstrate the solutions to both of these problems. In particular, we present a method to design masks with practical minimal feature sizes and show new manufactured masks with few defects. These masks were installed at HCIT and tested using more sophisticated wavefront control algorithms based on energy minimization of light in the dark zone. We present the results of these experiments, notably a record 2.4×10-9 contrast in 10% broadband light.


Applied Optics | 2000

Temporal coherence of individual turbulent patterns in atmospheric seeing

Brian Kern; Ted A. Laurence; Christopher D. Martin; Paul E. Dimotakis

We used a variation of the generalized scidar (scintillation detection and ranging) technique to examine the temporal coherence of turbulent patterns at different altitudes in the atmosphere above Palomar Observatory. This enables us to test the validity of a frozen turbulence hypothesis in the local reference frame of the moving atmosphere. The data set analyzed here contains three turbulent patterns, each at a different altitude, which remain internally coherent over time scales of 0.28-0.41 s. This measurement is significant, because it is made on a 5-m aperture, allowing moving patterns to be tracked over time scales longer than their own lifetimes.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2011

Pair-Wise, Deformable Mirror, Image Plane-Based Diversity Electric Field Estimation for High Contrast Coronagraphy

Amir Give'on; Brian Kern; Stuart B. Shaklan

In this paper we describe the complex electric field reconstruction from image plane intensity measurements for high contrast coronagraphic imaging. A deformable mirror (DM) surface is modified with pairs of complementary shapes to create diversity in the image plane of the science camera where the intensity of the light is measured. Along with the Electric Field Conjugation correction algorithm, this estimation method has been used in various high contrast imaging testbeds to achieve the best contrasts to date both in narrow and in broad band light. We present the basic methodology of estimation in easy to follow list of steps, present results from HCIT and raise several open questions we are confronted with using this method.


Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems | 2015

WFIRST-AFTA coronagraph shaped pupil masks: design, fabrication, and characterization

Kunjithapatham Balasubramanian; Victor White; Karl Y. Yee; P. M. Echternach; Richard E. Muller; Matthew R. Dickie; Eric Cady; Camilo Mejia Prada; Daniel J. Ryan; Ilya Poberezhskiy; Brian Kern; Hanying Zhou; John E. Krist; Bijan Nemati; A. J. Eldorado Riggs; Neil Zimmerman; N. Jeremy Kasdin

Abstract. NASA WFIRST-AFTA mission study includes a coronagraph instrument to find and characterize exoplanets. Various types of masks could be employed to suppress the host starlight to about 10−9 level contrast over a broad spectrum to enable the coronagraph mission objectives. Such masks for high-contrast internal coronagraphic imaging require various fabrication technologies to meet a wide range of specifications, including precise shapes, micron scale island features, ultralow reflectivity regions, uniformity, wave front quality, and achromaticity. We present the approaches employed at JPL to produce pupil plane and image plane coronagraph masks by combining electron beam, deep reactive ion etching, and black silicon technologies with illustrative examples of each, highlighting milestone accomplishments from the High Contrast Imaging Testbed at JPL and from the High Contrast Imaging Lab at Princeton University.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2011

Recent results of the second generation of vector vortex coronagraphs on the high-contrast imaging testbed at JPL

Dimitri Mawet; Eugene Serabyn; Dwight Moody; Brian Kern; Albert Niessner; Andreas Kuhnert; David M. Shemo; Russell A. Chipman; Stephen C. McClain; John T. Trauger

The Vector Vortex Coronagraph (VVC) is an attractive internal coronagraph solution to image and characterize exoplanets. It provides four key pillars on which efficient high contrast imaging instruments can be built for ground- and space-based telescopes: small inner working angle, high throughput, clear off-axis discovery space, and simple layout. We present the status of the VVC technology development supported by NASA. We will review recent results of the optical tests of the second-generation topological charge 4 VVC on the actively corrected High Contrast Imaging Testbed (HCIT) at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). New VVC contrast records have been established.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2011

Taking the vector vortex coronagraph to the next level for ground- and space-based exoplanet imaging instruments: review of technology developments in the USA, Japan, and Europe

Dimitri Mawet; Naoshi Murakami; Christian Delacroix; Eugene Serabyn; Olivier Absil; Naoshi Baba; Jacques Baudrand; A. Boccaletti; Rick Burruss; Russell A. Chipman; Pontus Forsberg; Serge Habraken; Shoki Hamaguchi; Charles Hanot; Akitoshi Ise; Mikael Karlsson; Brian Kern; John E. Krist; Andreas Kuhnert; Marie Levine; Kurt Liewer; Stephen C. McClain; Scott McEldowney; B. Mennesson; Dwight Moody; Hiroshi Murakami; Albert Niessner; Jun Nishikawa; Nada A. O'Brien; Kazuhiko Oka

The Vector Vortex Coronagraph (VVC) is one of the most attractive new-generation coronagraphs for ground- and space-based exoplanet imaging/characterization instruments, as recently demonstrated on sky at Palomar and in the laboratory at JPL, and Hokkaido University. Manufacturing technologies for devices covering wavelength ranges from the optical to the mid-infrared, have been maturing quickly. We will review the current status of technology developments supported by NASA in the USA (Jet Propulsion Laboratory-California Institute of Technology, University of Arizona, JDSU and BEAMCo), Europe (University of Li`ege, Observatoire de Paris- Meudon, University of Uppsala) and Japan (Hokkaido University, and Photonics Lattice Inc.), using liquid crystal polymers, subwavelength gratings, and photonics crystals, respectively. We will then browse concrete perspectives for the use of the VVC on upcoming ground-based facilities with or without (extreme) adaptive optics, extremely large ground-based telescopes, and space-based internal coronagraphs.


Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems | 2015

Methods and limitations of focal plane sensing, estimation, and control in high-contrast imaging

Tyler D. Groff; A. J. Eldorado Riggs; Brian Kern; N. Jeremy Kasdin

Abstract. Coronagraphy is a very promising method for directly imaging exoplanets, but the performance of a coronagraph is highly sensitive to quasi-static aberrations within the telescope. The resultant speckles are suppressed in the final focal plane using a wavefront control system that estimates the field at the final focal plane to avoid any noncommon path error. This requires a set of probe images that modulate the field so that it may be estimated. With an estimate of the focal plane electric field, a control law is defined to suppress the speckle field so that the planet can be imaged. Characterizing the planet requires that the speckle field be suppressed simultaneously over the bandpass of interest. The choice of control law, bandpass, estimator, and probing methodology has implications in the control solutions and contrast performance. Here, we compare wavefront probing, estimation, and control algorithms, and describe their practical implementation.

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Andreas Kuhnert

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Eric Cady

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Amir Give'on

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Dwight Moody

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Erkin Sidick

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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