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Dive into the research topics where Michael J. Wilby is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael J. Wilby.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

The coronagraphic Modal Wavefront Sensor: a hybrid focal-plane sensor for the high-contrast imaging of circumstellar environments

Michael J. Wilby; Christoph U. Keller; Frans Snik; Visa Korkiakoski; Alexander G. M. Pietrow

The raw coronagraphic performance of current high-contrast imaging instruments is limited by the presence of a quasi-static speckle (QSS) background, resulting from instrumental Non-Common Path Errors (NCPEs). Rapid development of efficient speckle subtraction techniques in data reduction has enabled final contrasts of up to 10 -6 to be obtained, however it remains preferable to eliminate the underlying NCPEs at the source. In this work we introduce the coronagraphic Modal Wavefront Sensor (cMWS), a new wavefront sensor suitable for real-time NCPE correction. This combines the Apodizing Phase Plate (APP) coronagraph with a holographic modal wavefront sensor to provide simultaneous coronagraphic imaging and focal-plane wavefront sensing with the science point-spread function. We first characterise the baseline performance of the cMWS via idealised closed-loop simulations, showing that the sensor is able to successfully recover diffraction-limited coronagraph performance over an effective dynamic range of ±2.5 radians root-mean-square (rms) wavefront error within 2–10 iterations, with performance independent of the specific choice of mode basis. We then present the results of initial on-sky testing at the William Herschel Telescope, which demonstrate that the sensor is capable of NCPE sensing under realistic seeing conditions via the recovery of known static aberrations to an accuracy of 10 nm (0.1 radians) rms error in the presence of a dominant atmospheric speckle foreground. We also find that the sensor is capable of real-time measurement of broadband atmospheric wavefront variance (50% bandwidth, 158 nm rms wavefront error) at a cadence of 50 Hz over an uncorrected telescope sub-aperture. When combined with a suitable closed-loop adaptive optics system, the cMWS holds the potential to deliver an improvement of up to two orders of magnitude over the uncorrected QSS floor. Such a sensor would be eminently suitable for the direct imaging and spectroscopy of exoplanets with both existing and future instruments, including EPICS and METIS for the E-ELT.


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018

Modeling coronagraphic extreme wavefront control systems for high contrast imaging in ground and space telescope missions

Jennifer Lumbres; Jared R. Males; Ewan S. Douglas; Laird M. Close; Kerri Cahoy; Ashley Carlton; Jim Clark; David S. Doelman; Lee D. Feinberg; Olivier Guyon; Justin Knight; Weston Marlow; Kelsey Miller; Katie M. Morzinski; Emiel H. Por; Alexander T. Rodack; Lauren Schatz; Frans Snik; Kyle Van Gorkom; Michael J. Wilby

The challenges of high contrast imaging (HCI) for detecting exoplanets for both ground and space applications can be met with extreme adaptive optics (ExAO), a high-order adaptive optics system that performs wavefront sensing (WFS) and correction at high speed. We describe 2 ExAO optical system designs, one each for ground- based telescopes and space-based missions, and examine them using the angular spectrum Fresnel propagation module within the Physical Optics Propagation in Python (POPPY) package. We present an end-to-end (E2E) simulation of the MagAO-X instrument, an ExAO system capable of delivering 6x10-5 visible-light raw contrast for static, noncommon path aberrations without atmosphere. We present an E2E simulation of a laser guidestar (LGS) companion spacecraft testbed demonstration, which uses a remote beacon to increase the signal available for WFS and control of the primary aperture segments of a future large space telescope, providing of order 10 factor improvement for relaxing observatory stability requirements.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018

Laboratory verification of Fast & Furious phase diversity: Towards controlling the low wind effect in the SPHERE instrument

Michael J. Wilby; Christoph U. Keller; Jean-François Sauvage; Kjetil Dohlen; Thierry Fusco; David Mouillet; Jean-Luc Beuzit

The low wind effect (LWE) refers to a characteristic set of quasi-static wavefront aberrations seen consistently by the SPHERE instrument when dome-level wind speeds drop below 3 m/s. This effect produces bright low-order speckles in the stellar PSF, which severely limit the contrast performance of SPHERE under otherwise optimal observing conditions. In this paper we propose the Fast & Furious (F&F) phase diversity algorithm as a viable software-only solution for real-time LWE compensation, which would utilise image sequences from the SPHERE differential tip-tilt sensor (DTTS). We evaluated the closed-loop performance of F&F on the MITHIC high-contrast test-bench under a variety of conditions emulating LWE-affected DTTS images, in order to assess the expected performance of an on-sky implementation of F&F in SPHERE. The algorithm was found to be capable of returning such LWE-affected images to Strehl ratios of greater than 90% within five iterations, for all appropriate laboratory test cases. These results are highly representative of predictive simulations, and demonstrate the stability of the algorithm against a wide range of factors including low image signal-to-noise ratio (S/N), small image field of view, and amplitude errors. It was also found in simulation that closed-loop stability can be preserved down to image S/N as low as five while still improving overall wavefront quality, allowing for reliable operation even on faint targets. The Fast & Furious algorithm is an extremely promising solution for real-time compensation of the LWE, which can operate simultaneously with science observations and may be implemented in SPHERE without requiring additional hardware. The robustness and relatively large effective dynamic range of F&F also make it suitable for general wavefront optimisation applications, including the co-phasing of segmented ELT-class telescopes.


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018

Review of high-contrast imaging systems for current and future ground-based and space-based telescopes: Part II. Common path wavefront sensing/control and coherent differential imaging

Nemanja Jovanovic; Olivier Guyon; Mamadou N'Diaye; Raphaël Galicher; Dan Sirbu; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Marie Ygouf; Pierre Baudoz; Jonas Kühn; Elsa Huby; Michael J. Wilby; Emiel H. Por; Sebastiaan Y. Haffert; Christoph U. Keller; Frans Snik; Kelsey Miller; James K. Wallace; Mathilde Beaulieu; Eric Cady; J. B. Jewell; Johan Mazoyer; Olivier Absil; Garreth Ruane; Laurent Pueyo; Michael Bottom; Brunella Carlomagno; Alexis Carlotti; David S. Doelman; Kevin Fogarty; Justin Knight

The Optimal Optical Coronagraph (OOC) Workshop held at the Lorentz Center in September 2017 in Leiden, the Netherlands, gathered a diverse group of 25 researchers working on exoplanet instrumentation to stimulate the emergence and sharing of new ideas. In this second installment of a series of three papers summarizing the outcomes of the OOC workshop, we present an overview of common path wavefront sensing/control and Coherent Differential Imaging techniques, highlight the latest results, and expose their relative strengths and weaknesses. We layout critical milestones for the field with the aim of enhancing future ground/space based high contrast imaging platforms. Techniques like these will help to bridge the daunting contrast gap required to image a terrestrial planet in the zone where it can retain liquid water, in reflected light around a G type star from space.


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018

Focal plane wavefront sensing and control strategies for high-contrast imaging on the MagAO-X instrument

Kelsey Miller; Jared R. Males; Olivier Guyon; Laird M. Close; David S. Doelman; Frans Snik; Emiel H. Por; Michael J. Wilby; Chris Bohlman; Jennifer Lumbres; Kyle Van Gorkom; Maggie Y. Kautz; Alexander T. Rodack; Justin Knight; Nemanja Jovanovic; Katie M. Morzinski; Lauren Schatz

The Magellan extreme adaptive optics (MagAO-X) instrument is a new extreme adaptive optics (ExAO) system designed for operation in the visible to near-IR which will deliver high contrast-imaging capabilities. The main AO system will be driven by a pyramid wavefront sensor (PyWFS); however, to mitigate the impact of quasi-static and non-common path (NCP) aberrations, focal plane wavefront sensing (FPWFS) in the form of low-order wavefront sensing (LOWFS) and spatial linear dark field control (LDFC) will be employed behind a vector apodizing phase plate (vAPP) coronagraph using rejected starlight at an intermediate focal plane. These techniques will allow for continuous high-contrast imaging performance at the raw contrast level delivered by the vAPP coronagraph ( 6 x 10-5). We present simulation results for LOWFS and spatial LDFC with a vAPP coronagraph, as well as laboratory results for both algorithms implemented with a vAPP coronagraph at the University of Arizona Extreme Wavefront Control Lab.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Designing and testing the coronagraphic Modal Wavefront Sensor: a fast non-common path error sensor for high-contrast imaging

Michael J. Wilby; Christoph U. Keller; Sebastiaan Y. Haffert; Visa Korkiakoski; F. Snik; A. G. M. Pietrow

Non-Common Path Errors (NCPEs) are the dominant factor limiting the performance of current astronomical high-contrast imaging instruments. If uncorrected, the resulting quasi-static speckle noise floor limits coronagraph performance to a raw contrast of typically 10−4, a value which does not improve with increasing integration time. The coronagraphic Modal Wavefront Sensor (cMWS) is a hybrid phase optic which uses holographic PSF copies to supply focal-plane wavefront sensing information directly from the science camera, whilst maintaining a bias-free coronagraphic PSF. This concept has already been successfully implemented on-sky at the William Herschel Telescope (WHT), La Palma, demonstrating both real-time wavefront sensing capability and successful extraction of slowly varying wavefront errors under a dominant and rapidly changing atmospheric speckle foreground. In this work we present an overview of the development of the cMWS and recent first light results obtained using the Leiden EXoplanet Instrument (LEXI), a high-contrast imager and high-dispersion spectrograph pathfinder instrument for the WHT.


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018

Multiplexed holographic aperture masking with liquid-crystal geometric phase masks

Peter G. Tuthill; Barnaby Norris; Christoph U. Keller; Emiel H. Por; David S. Doelman; Frans Snik; Michael J. Escuti; Michael J. Wilby

Sparse Aperture Masking (SAM) allows for high-contrast imaging at small inner working angles, however the performance is limited by the small throughput and the number of baselines. We present the concept and first lab results of Holographic Aperture Masking (HAM) with extreme liquid-crystal geometric phase patterns. We multiplex subapertures using holographic techniques to combine the same subaperture in multiple non-redundant PSFs in combination with a non-interferometric reference spot. This way arbitrary subaperture combinations and PSF configurations can be realized, giving HAM more uv-coverage, better throughput and improved calibration as compared to SAM, at the cost of detector space.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018

First direct detection of a polarized companion outside a resolved circumbinary disk around CS Chamaeleonis

C. Ginski; M. Benisty; R. G. van Holstein; A. Juhász; T. O. B. Schmidt; G. Chauvin; J. de Boer; Michael J. Wilby; C. F. Manara; P. Delorme; Francois Menard; P. Pinilla; T. Birnstiel; Mario Flock; Christoph U. Keller; Matthew A. Kenworthy; J. Milli; J. Olofsson; Laura M. Pérez; F. Snik; N. Vogt

Aims. To understand planet formation it is necessary to study the birth environment of planetary systems. Resolved imaging of young planet forming disks allows us to study this environment in great detail and find signs of planet-disk interaction and disk evolution. In the present study we aim to investigate the circumstellar environment of the spectroscopic binary T Tauri star CS Cha. From unresolved mid- to far-infrared photometry it is predicted that CS Cha hosts a disk with a large cavity. In addition, spectral energy distribution modeling suggests significant dust settling, pointing toward an evolved disk that may show signs of ongoing or completed planet formation. Methods. We observed CS Cha with the high contrast imager SPHERE at the ESO Very Large Telescope (VLT) in polarimetric differential imaging mode to resolve the circumbinary disk in near-infrared scattered light. These observations were followed up by VLT/NACO L-band observations and complemented by archival VLT/NACO K-band and Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 I-band data. Results. We resolve the compact circumbinary disk around CS Cha for the first time in scattered light. We find a smooth, low inclination disk with an outer radius of similar to 55 au (at 165 pc). We do not detect the inner cavity but find an upper limit for the cavity size of similar to 15 au. Furthermore, we find a faint comoving companion with a projected separation of 210 au from the central binary outside of the circumbinary disk. The companion is detected in polarized light and shows an extreme degree of polarization (13.7 +/- 0.4% in the J band). The J- and H-band magnitudes of the companion are compatible with masses of a few M-Jup. However, K-, L-, and I-band data draw this conclusion into question. We explore with radiative transfer modeling whether an unresolved circum-companion disk can be responsible for the high polarization and complex photometry. We find that the set of observations is best explained by a heavily extincted low-mass (similar to 20 M-Jup) brown dwarf or high-mass planet with an unresolved disk and dust envelope.


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018

Review of high-contrast imaging systems for current and future ground- and space-based telescopes I: coronagraph design methods and optical performance metrics

Ewan S. Douglas; Neil Zimmerman; Garreth Ruane; Johan Mazoyer; A. J. Eldorado Riggs; Brunella Carlomagno; Elsa Huby; Kevin Fogarty; Emiel H. Por; Olivier Absil; Pierre Baudoz; Raphaël Galicher; Mathilde Beaulieu; Eric Cady; Alexis Carlotti; David S. Doelman; Olivier Guyon; Sebastiaan Y. Haffert; J. B. Jewell; Nemanja Jovanovic; Christoph U. Keller; Matthew A. Kenworthy; Justin Knight; Jonas Kühn; Kelsey Miller; Mamadou N’Diaye; Laurent Pueyo; Dan Sirbu; Frans Snik; James K. Wallace

The Optimal Optical Coronagraph (OOC) Workshop at the Lorentz Center in September 2017 in Leiden, the Netherlands gathered a diverse group of 25 researchers working on exoplanet instrumentation to stimulate the emergence and sharing of new ideas. In this first installment of a series of three papers summarizing the outcomes of the OOC workshop, we present an overview of design methods and optical performance metrics developed for coronagraph instruments. The design and optimization of coronagraphs for future telescopes has progressed rapidly over the past several years in the context of space mission studies for Exo-C, WFIRST, HabEx, and LUVOIR as well as ground-based telescopes. Design tools have been developed at several institutions to optimize a variety of coronagraph mask types. We aim to give a broad overview of the approaches used, examples of their utility, and provide the optimization tools to the community. Though it is clear that the basic function of coronagraphs is to suppress starlight while maintaining light from off-axis sources, our community lacks a general set of standard performance metrics that apply to both detecting and characterizing exoplanets. The attendees of the OOC workshop agreed that it would benefit our community to clearly define quantities for comparing the performance of coronagraph designs and systems. Therefore, we also present a set of metrics that may be applied to theoretical designs, testbeds, and deployed instruments. We show how these quantities may be used to easily relate the basic properties of the optical instrument to the detection significance of the given point source in the presence of realistic noise.


Adaptive Optics Systems VI | 2018

On-sky results of the Leiden EXoplanet Instrument (LEXI)

Sebastiaan Y. Haffert; Christoph U. Keller; Ignas A. G. Snellen; Emiel H. Por; David S. Doelman; Joost Wardenier; Michael J. Wilby; Maaike van Kooten; Steven P. Bos

The Leiden EXoplanet Instrument (LEXI) is a bench-mounted high-contrast spectrograph (HCS) and high- contrast imager(HCI). Both science instruments are mounted behind a common adaptive optics (AO) system. The AO can be controlled by several new wavefront sensors for which we will show the first on-sky results. There is a new pupil-plane wavefront sensors; the Generalized Optical Differentiation Wavefront sensor(g-ODWFS). LEXI can switch between two observing modes, the HCI mode or the HD-IFS mode. The spectrograph is very compact because it is fed by single-mode fiber. The HD-IFS is an IFS that covers the spectral range of 600 800 nm with a constant spectral resolving power of 96000. The 2kx3k detector makes it possible to deliver diffraction limited spectra of up to 20 input fibers. The high-dispersion spectra of the HD-IFS allow for robust post-processing technique to remove residual stellar speckles and allows for direct characterization of the faint stellar environment. We will show the first sucesful on-sky results of the injection into a single-mode fiber with LEXI. In HCI mode an Apodizing Phase Plate (APP) is used to create a dark region around the star with an average design contrast of 1E-4. The APP is multiplexed with holographic modes to create the Coronagraphic Modal Wavefront sensor (cMWS) for non-common path error (NCPE) correction. The cMWS creates holographic copies in the focal plane that react linearly to aberrations. The holographic copies are measured simultaneously with the science target. There is no downtime for NCPE correction. We will show the first on-sky closed-loop correction of (NCPEs) with the cMWS.

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