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Dive into the research topics where Gilles Otten is active.

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Featured researches published by Gilles Otten.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The vector-APP: a broadband apodizing phase plate that yields complementary PSFs

Frans Snik; Gilles Otten; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Matthew N. Miskiewicz; Michael J. Escuti; C. Packham; Johanan L. Codona

The apodizing phase plate (APP) is a solid-state pupil optic that clears out a D-shaped area next to the core of the ensuing PSF. To make the APP more efficient for high-contrast imaging, its bandwidth should be as large as possible, and the location of the D-shaped area should be easily swapped to the other side of the PSF. We present the design of a broadband APP that yields two PSFs that have the opposite sides cleared out. Both properties are enabled by a half-wave liquid crystal layer, for which the local fast axis orientation over the pupil is forced to follow the required phase structure. For each of the two circular polarization states, the required phase apodization is thus obtained, and, moreover, the PSFs after a quarter-wave plate and a polarizing beam-splitter are complementary due to the antisymmetric nature of the phase apodization. The device can be achromatized in the same way as half-wave plates of the Pancharatnam type or by layering self-aligning twisted liquid crystals to form a monolithic film called a multi-twist retarder. As the VAPP introduces a known phase diversity between the two PSFs, they may be used directly for wavefront sensing. By applying an additional quarter-wave plate in front, the device also acts as a regular polarizing beam-splitter, which therefore furnishes high-contrast polarimetric imaging. If the PSF core is not saturated, the polarimetric dual-beam correction can also be applied to polarized circumstellar structure. The prototype results show the viability of the vector-APP concept.


Optics Express | 2014

Performance characterization of a broadband vector Apodizing Phase Plate coronagraph.

Gilles Otten; Frans Snik; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Matthew N. Miskiewicz; Michael J. Escuti

One of the main challenges for the direct imaging of planets around nearby stars is the suppression of the diffracted halo from the primary star. Coronagraphs are angular filters that suppress this diffracted halo. The Apodizing Phase Plate coronagraph modifies the pupil-plane phase with an anti-symmetric pattern to suppress diffraction over a 180 degree region from 2 to 7 λ/D and achieves a mean raw contrast of 10(-4) in this area, independent of the tip-tilt stability of the system. Current APP coronagraphs implemented using classical phase techniques are limited in bandwidth and suppression region geometry (i.e. only on one side of the star). In this paper, we introduce the vector-APP (vAPP) whose phase pattern is implemented through the vector phase imposed by the orientation of patterned liquid crystals. Beam-splitting according to circular polarization states produces two, complementary PSFs with dark holes on either side. We have developed a prototype vAPP that consists of a stack of three twisting liquid crystal layers to yield a bandwidth of 500 to 900 nm. We characterize the properties of this device using reconstructions of the pupil-plane pattern, and of the ensuing PSF structures. By imaging the pupil between crossed and parallel polarizers we reconstruct the fast axis pattern, transmission, and retardance of the vAPP, and use this as input for a PSF model. This model includes aberrations of the laboratory set-up, and matches the measured PSF, which shows a raw contrast of 10(-3.8) between 2 and 7 λ/D in a 135 degree wedge. The vAPP coronagraph is relatively easy to manufacture and can be implemented together with a broadband quarter-wave plate and Wollaston prism in a pupil wheel in high-contrast imaging instruments. The liquid crystal patterning technique permits the application of extreme phase patterns with deeper contrasts inside the dark holes, and the multilayer liquid crystal achromatization technique enables unprecedented spectral bandwidths for phase-manipulation coronagraphy.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

ON-SKY PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF THE VECTOR APODIZING PHASE PLATE CORONAGRAPH ON MagAO/Clio2

Gilles Otten; Frans Snik; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Christoph U. Keller; Jared R. Males; Katie M. Morzinski; Laird M. Close; Johanan L. Codona; Philip M. Hinz; Kathryn J. Hornburg; Leandra Brickson; Michael J. Escuti

Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO); European Research Council [678194]; NASA Exoplanets Research Program (XRP) [NNX16AD44G]


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Search for Rayleigh Scattering in the Atmosphere of GJ1214b

E. J. W. de Mooij; M. Brogi; R. J. de Kok; I. A. G. Snellen; Bryce Croll; Ray Jayawardhana; Henk Hoekstra; Gilles Otten; D. H. Bekkers; S. Y. Haffert; J. J. van Houdt

We investigate the atmosphere of GJ1214b, a transiting super-Earth planet with a low mean density, by measuring its transit depth as a function of wavelength in the blue optical portion of the spectrum. It is thought that this planet is either a mini-Neptune, consisting of a rocky core with a thick, hydrogen-rich atmosphere, or a planet with a composition dominated by water. Most observations favor a water-dominated atmosphere with a small scale-height, however, some observations indicate that GJ1214b could have an extended atmosphere with a cloud layer muting the molecular features. In an atmosphere with a large scale-height, Rayleigh scattering at blue wavelengths is likely to cause a measurable increase in the apparent size of the planet toward the blue. We observed the transit of GJ1214b in the B band with the FOcal Reducing Spectrograph at the Very Large Telescope and in the g band with both ACAM on the William Herschel Telescope (WHT) and the Wide Field Camera at the Isaac Newton Telescope (INT). We find a planet-to-star radius ratio in the B band of 0.1162 ± 0.0017, and in the g band 0.1180 ± 0.0009 and 0.1174 ± 0.0017 for the WHT and INT observations, respectively. These optical data do not show significant deviations from previous measurements at longer wavelengths. In fact, a flat transmission spectrum across all wavelengths best describes the combined observations. When atmospheric models are considered, a small scale-height water-dominated model fits the data best.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

The Multi-site All-Sky CAmeRA (MASCARA) - Finding transiting exoplanets around bright (mV < 8) stars

G. J. J. Talens; J. F. P. Spronck; A.-L. Lesage; Gilles Otten; Remko Stuik; Don Pollacco; I. A. G. Snellen

This paper describes the design, operations, and performance of the Multi-site All-Sky CAmeRA (MASCARA). Its primary goal is to find new exoplanets transiting bright stars,


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Ground-based search for the brightest transiting planets with the Multi-site All-Sky CAmeRA: MASCARA

I. A. G. Snellen; Remko Stuik; Ramón Navarro; Felix C. M. Bettonvil; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Ernst de Mooij; Gilles Otten; Rik ter Horst; Rudolf S. Le Poole

4 < m_V < 8


Applied Optics | 2014

Fast & Furious focal-plane wavefront sensing

Visa Korkiakoski; Christoph U. Keller; Niek Doelman; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Gilles Otten; Michel Verhaegen

, by monitoring the full sky. MASCARA consists of one northern station on La Palma, Canary Islands (fully operational since February 2015), one southern station at La Silla Observatory, Chile (operational from early 2017), and a data centre at Leiden Observatory in the Netherlands. Both MASCARA stations are equipped with five interline CCD cameras using wide field lenses (24 mm focal length) with fixed pointings, which together provide coverage down to airmass 3 of the local sky. The interline CCD cameras allow for back-to-back exposures, taken at fixed sidereal times with exposure times of 6.4 sidereal seconds. The exposures are short enough that the motion of stars across the CCD does not exceed one pixel during an integration. Astrometry and photometry are performed on-site, after which the resulting light curves are transferred to Leiden for further analysis. The final MASCARA archive will contain light curves for


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Combining vector-phase coronagraphy with dual-beam polarimetry

Frans Snik; Gilles Otten; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Dimitri Mawet; Michael J. Escuti

{\sim}70,000


Applied Optics | 2013

Calibrating a high-resolution wavefront corrector with a static focal-plane camera

Visa Korkiakoski; Niek Doelman; Johanan L. Codona; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Gilles Otten; Christoph U. Keller

stars down to


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

End-to-end simulations of the E-ELT/METIS coronagraphs

Brunella Carlomagno; Olivier Absil; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Garreth Ruane; Christoph U. Keller; Gilles Otten; Markus Feldt; Stefan Hippler; Elsa Huby; Dimitri Mawet; Christian Delacroix; Jean Surdej; Serge Habraken; Pontus Forsberg; Mikael Karlsson; Ernesto Vargas Catalan; Bernhard R. Brandl

m_V=8.4

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Michael J. Escuti

North Carolina State University

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