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Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Conceptual design of the Coronagraphic High Angular Resolution Imaging Spectrograph (CHARIS) for the Subaru telescope

Mary Anne Peters; Tyler D. Groff; N. Jeremy Kasdin; Michael W. McElwain; Michael Galvin; Michael A. Carr; Robert H. Lupton; James E. Gunn; Gillian R. Knapp; Qian Gong; Alexis Carlotti; Timothy D. Brandt; Markus Janson; Olivier Guyon; Frantz Martinache; Masahiko Hayashi; Naruhisa Takato

Recent developments in high-contrast imaging techniques now make possible both imaging and spectroscopy of planets around nearby stars. We present the conceptual design of the Coronagraphic High Angular Resolution Imaging Spectrograph (CHARIS), a lenslet-based, cryogenic integral field spectrograph (IFS) for imaging exo-planets on the Subaru telescope. The IFS will provide spectral information for 140x140 spatial elements over a 1.75 arcsecs x 1.75 arcsecs field of view (FOV). CHARIS will operate in the near infrared (λ = 0.9-2.5μm) and provide a spectral resolution of R = 14, 33, and 65 in three separate observing modes. Taking advantage of the adaptive optics systems and advanced coronagraphs (AO188 and SCExAO) on the Subaru telescope, CHARIS will provide sufficient contrast to obtain spectra of young self-luminous Jupiter-mass exoplanets. CHARIS is in the early design phases and is projected to have first light by the end of 2015. We report here on the current conceptual design of CHARIS and the design challenges.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Construction and status of the CHARIS high contrast imaging spectrograph

Tyler D. Groff; N. J. Kasdin; Mary Anne Limbach; Michael Galvin; Michael A. Carr; Gillian R. Knapp; Timothy D. Brandt; Craig Loomis; Norm Jarosik; Kyle Mede; Michael W. McElwain; Markus Janson; Olivier Guyon; Nemanja Jovanovic; Naruhisa Takato; Frantz Martinache; Masahiko Hayashi

Princeton University is building the Coronagraphic High Angular Resolution Imaging Spectrograph (CHARIS), an integral field spectrograph (IFS) for the Subaru telescope. CHARIS is funded by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan and is designed to take high contrast spectra of brown dwarfs and hot Jovian planets in the coronagraphic image provided by the Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics (SCExAO) and the AO188 adaptive optics systems. The project is now in the build and test phase at Princeton University. Once laboratory testing has been completed CHARIS will be integrated with SCExAO and AO188 in the winter of 2016. CHARIS has a high-resolution characterization mode in J, H, and K bands. The average spectral resolution in J, H, and K bands are R82, R68, and R82 respectively, the uniformity of which is a direct result of a new high index material, L-BBH2. CHARIS also has a second low-resolution imaging mode that spans J,H, and K bands with an average spectral resolution of R19, a feature unique to this instrument. The field of view in both imaging modes is 2.07x2.07 arcseconds. SCExAO+CHARIS will detect objects five orders of magnitude dimmer than their parent star down to an 80 milliarcsecond inner working angle. The primary challenge with exoplanet imaging is the presence of quasi-static speckles in the coronagraphic image. SCExAO has a wavefront control system to suppress these speckles and CHARIS will address their impact on spectral crosstalk through hardware design, which drives its optical and mechanical design. CHARIS constrains crosstalk to be below 1% for an adjacent source that is a full order of magnitude brighter than the neighboring spectra. Since CHARIS is on the Nasmyth platform, the optical alignment between the lenslet array and prism is highly stable. This improves the stability of the spectra and their orientation on the detector and results in greater stability in the wavelength solution for the data pipeline. This means less uncertainty in the post-processing and less overhead for on-sky calibration procedures required by the data pipeline. Here we present the science case, design, and construction status of CHARIS. The design and lessons learned from testing CHARIS highlights the choices that must be considered to design an IFS for high signal-to-noise spectra in a coronagraphic image. The design considerations and lessons learned are directly applicable to future exoplanet instrumentation for extremely large telescopes and space observatories capable of detecting rocky planets in the habitable zone.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

The Optical Design of CHARIS: An Exoplanet IFS for the Subaru Telescope

Mary Anne Peters-Limbach; Tyler D. Groff; N. Jeremy Kasdin; Dave Driscoll; Michael Galvin; Allen Foster; Michael A. Carr; Dave LeClerc; Rad Fagan; Michael W. McElwain; Gillian R. Knapp; Timothy D. Brandt; Markus Janson; Olivier Guyon; Nemanja Jovanovic; Frantz Martinache; Masahiko Hayashi; Naruhisa Takato

High-contrast imaging techniques now make possible both imaging and spectroscopy of planets around nearby stars. We present the optical design for the Coronagraphic High Angular Resolution Imaging Spectrograph (CHARIS), a lenslet-based, cryogenic integral field spectrograph (IFS) for imaging exoplanets on the Subaru telescope. The IFS will provide spectral information for 138 × 138 spatial elements over a 2.07 arcsec × 2.07 arcsec field of view (FOV). CHARIS will operate in the near infrared (λ = 1.15 - 2.5μm) and will feature two spectral resolution modes of R ~ 18 (low-res mode) and R ~ 73 (high-res mode). Taking advantage of the Subaru telescope adaptive optics systems and coronagraphs (AO188 and SCExAO), CHARIS will provide sufficient contrast to obtain spectra of young self-luminous Jupiter-mass exoplanets. CHARIS will undergo CDR in October 2013 and is projected to have first light by the end of 2015. We report here on the current optical design of CHARIS and its unique innovations.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Experimental study of starshade at flight Fresnel numbers in the laboratory

Yunjong Kim; Dan Sirbu; Michael Galvin; N. Jeremy Kasdin; Robert J. Vanderbei

A starshade or external occulter is a spacecraft flown along the line-of-sight of a space telescope to suppress starlight and enable high-contrast direct imaging of exoplanets. Because of its large size and scale it is impossible to fully test a starshade system on the ground before launch. Therefore, laboratory verification of starshade designs is necessary to validate the optical models used to design and predict starshade performance. At Princeton, we have designed and built a testbed that allows verification of scaled starshade designs whose suppressed shadow is mathematically identical to that of a comparable space starshade. The starshade testbed uses 77.2 m optical propagation distance to realize the flight-appropriate Fresnel numbers of 14.5. Here we present the integration status of the testbed and simulations predicting the ultimate contrast performance. We will also present our results of wavefront error measurement and its implementation of suppression and contrast.


Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems | 2017

Data reduction pipeline for the CHARIS integral-field spectrograph I: detector readout calibration and data cube extraction

Timothy D. Brandt; Maxime J. Rizzo; Tyler D. Groff; Jeffrey K. Chilcote; Johnny P. Greco; N. Jeremy Kasdin; Mary Anne Limbach; Michael Galvin; Craig Loomis; Gillian R. Knapp; Michael W. McElwain; Nemanja Jovanovic; Thayne Currie; Kyle Mede; Motohide Tamura; Naruhisa Takato; Masahiko Hayashi

Abstract. We present the data reduction pipeline for CHARIS, a high-contrast integral-field spectrograph for the Subaru Telescope. The pipeline constructs a ramp from the raw reads using the measured nonlinear pixel response and reconstructs the data cube using one of three extraction algorithms: aperture photometry, optimal extraction, or χ2 fitting. We measure and apply both a detector flatfield and a lenslet flatfield and reconstruct the wavelength- and position-dependent lenslet point-spread function (PSF) from images taken with a tunable laser. We use these measured PSFs to implement a χ2-based extraction of the data cube, with typical residuals of ∼5% due to imperfect models of the undersampled lenslet PSFs. The full two-dimensional residual of the χ2 extraction allows us to model and remove correlated read noise, dramatically improving CHARIS’s performance. The χ2 extraction produces a data cube that has been deconvolved with the line-spread function and never performs any interpolations of either the data or the individual lenslet spectra. The extracted data cube also includes uncertainties for each spatial and spectral measurement. CHARIS’s software is parallelized, written in Python and Cython, and freely available on github with a separate documentation page. Astrometric and spectrophotometric calibrations of the data cubes and PSF subtraction will be treated in a forthcoming paper.


Techniques and Instrumentation for Detection of Exoplanets VIII | 2017

Optical demonstration of a starshade at flight Fresnel numbers

Yunjong Kim; Anthony Harness; Dan Sirbu; Mia Hu; Michael Galvin; N. Jeremy Kasdin; Robert J. Vanderbei; Stuart B. Shaklan

A starshade is a specially designed opaque screen to suppress starlight and remove the effects of diffraction at the edge. The intensity at the pupil plane in the shadow is dark enough to detect Earth-like exoplanets by using direct imaging. At Princeton, we have designed and built a testbed that allows verification of scaled starshade designs whose suppressed shadow is mathematically identical to that of space starshade. The starshade testbed uses a 77.2 m optical propagation distance to realize the flight Fresnel number of 14.5. Here, we present lab result of a revised sample design operating at a flight Fresnel number. We compare the experimental results with simulations that predict the ultimate contrast performance.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Design and construction of a 76m long-travel laser enclosure for a space occulter testbed

Michael Galvin; Yunjong Kim; N. Jeremy Kasdin; Dan Sirbu; Robert J. Vanderbei; Dan Echeverri; Giuseppe Sagolla; Andreas Rousing; Kunjithapatham Balasubramanian; Daniel Ryan; Stuart B. Shaklan; Doug Lisman

Princeton University is upgrading our space occulter testbed. In particular, we are lengthening it to ~76m to achieve flightlike Fresnel numbers. This much longer testbed required an all-new enclosure design. In this design, we prioritized modularity and the use of commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) and semi-COTS components. Several of the technical challenges encountered included an unexpected slow beam drift and black paint selection. Herein we describe the design and construction of this long-travel laser enclosure.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2015

The CHARIS IFS for high contrast imaging at Subaru

Tyler D. Groff; N. Jeremy Kasdin; Mary Anne Limbach; Michael Galvin; Michael A. Carr; Gillian R. Knapp; Timothy D. Brandt; Craig Loomis; Norman Jarosik; Kyle Mede; Michael W. McElwain; Douglas B. Leviton; Kevin H. Miller; Manuel A. Quijada; Olivier Guyon; Nemanja Jovanovic; Naruhisa Takato; Masahiko Hayashi

The Coronagraphic High Angular Resolution Imaging Spectrograph (CHARIS) is an integral field spectrograph (IFS) being built for the Subaru telescope. CHARIS will take spectra of brown dwarfs and hot Jovian planets in the coronagraphic image provided by the Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics (SCExAO) and AO188 adaptive optics systems.1, 2 The system is designed to detect objects five orders of magnitude dimmer than their parent star down to an 80 milliarcsecond inner working angle. For characterization, CHARIS has a high-resolution prism providing an average spectral resolution of R82, R69, and R82 in J, H, and K bands respectively. The so-called discovery mode uses a second low-resolution prism with an average spectral resolution of R19 spanning 1.15-2.37 microns (J+H+K bands). This is unique compared to other high contrast IFS designs. It augments low inner working angle performance by reducing the separation at which we can rely on spectral differential imaging. The principal challenge for a high-contrast IFS is quasi-static speckles, which cause undue levels of spectral crosstalk. CHARIS has addressed this through several key design aspects that should constrain crosstalk between adjacent spectral features to be below 1%. Sitting on the Nasmyth platform, the alignment between the lenslet array, prism, and detector will be highly stable, key for the performance of the data pipeline. Nearly every component has arrived and the project is entering its final build phase. Here we review the science case, the resulting design, status of final construction, and lessons learned that are directly applicable to future exoplanet instruments.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Design of the CHARIS integral field spectrograph for exoplanet imaging

Tyler D. Groff; Mary Anne Peters; N. Jeremy Kasdin; Gillian R. Knapp; Michael Galvin; Michael A. Carr; Michael W. McElwain; Timothy D. Brandt; Markus Janson; James E. Gunn; Robert H. Lupton; Olivier Guyon; Frantz Martinache; Nemanja Jovanovic; Masahiko Hayashi; Naruhisa Takato

Princeton University is building an integral field spectrograph (IFS), the Coronagraphic High Angular Resolution Imaging Spectrograph (CHARIS), for integration with the Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics (SCExAO) system and the AO188 adaptive optics system on the Subaru telescope. CHARIS and SCExAO will measure spectra of hot, young Jovian planets in a coronagraphic image across J, H, and K bands down to an 80 milliarcsecond inner working angle. SCExAO’s coronagraphs and wavefront control system will make it possible to detect companions five orders of magnitude dimmer than their parent star. However, quasi-static speckles in the image contaminate the signal from the planet. In an IFS this also causes uncertainty in the spectra due to diffractive cross-contamination, commonly referred to as crosstalk. Post-processing techniques can subtract these speckles, but they can potentially skew spectral measurements, become less effective at small angular separation, and at best can only reduce the crosstalk down to the photon noise limit of the contaminating signal. CHARIS will address crosstalk effects of a high contrast image through hardware design, which drives the optical and mechanical design of the assembly. The work presented here sheds light on the optical and mechanical considerations taken in designing the IFS to provide high signal-to-noise spectra in a coronagraphic image from and extreme adaptive optics image. The design considerations and lessons learned are directly applicable to future exoplanet instrumentation for extremely large telescopes and space observatories capable of detecting rocky planets in the habitable zone.


Advances in Optical and Mechanical Technologies for Telescopes and Instrumentation III | 2018

First light of the High Contrast Integral Field Spectrograph (HCIFS)

He Sun; Tyler D. Groff; Maxime J. Rizzo; Mary Anne Limbach; Michael Galvin; Jeremy Kasdin; Matthew Grossman; Katherine Mumm; Christian Delacroix

Future space-based observatories such as WFIRST will be equipped with high contrast imaging instruments designed to study extrasolar planets and disks in the absence of atmospheric perturbations. One of the most efficient techniques to achieve this goal is the combination of wavefront control and broadband coronagraphy. Being able to achieve a high contrast over a wide spectral bandwidth allows us to characterize the chemical composition of exoplanet atmospheres using an integral field spectrograph (IFS). In this paper, we report on the development of such an IFS for the High Contrast Imaging Lab (HCIL) at Princeton University, downstream of a Shaped Pupil coronagraph. Our final lensletbased design calls for the light in an 18% band around 660 nm to be dispersed with a spectral resolution of 50. We also present our new laboratory control software written in Python, allowing the import of open-source packages such as CRISPY to ultimately reconstruct 3D datacubes from IFS spatio-spectral science images. Finally, we show and discuss our preliminary first light results, reaching a contrast of ~10-5 using in-house focal-plane wavefront control and estimation algorithms with two deformable mirrors.

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