Paper
15 June 2006 PIAA coronagraph design: system optimization and first optics testing
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
An optical system capable of extremely high contrast imaging (about 10-10) at separations comparable to the telescope's diffraction limit is critical for direct imaging of extrasolar terrestrial planets. The PIAA coronagraph (Guyon 2003) based on pupil apodization by geometrical remapping of the flux in the pupil plane seems to be especially adopted for the exoplanet imaging. Although this technique combines many of the advantages found separately in other coronagraphs, two serious concerns remain unanswered: optics manufacturability and effects of diffraction propagation. We describe here a hybrid PIAA/CPA (Classical Pupil Apodization) design in which the apodization is shared between a remapping system (the main apodizer) and "classical" apodizers (auxillary apodizers). In this scheme, optics become easier to manufacture and diffraction effects can be decreased to a level consistent with a 10-10 PSF contrast in a wide spectral band. We show how the parameters of hybrid PIAA/CPA system can be optimized and present some results of optical testing for the high optical quality prototype of PIAA coronagraph.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Eugene Pluzhnik, Olivier Guyon, Mark Warren, Stephen T. Ridgway, and Robert A. Woodruff "PIAA coronagraph design: system optimization and first optics testing", Proc. SPIE 6265, Space Telescopes and Instrumentation I: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter, 62653S (15 June 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.670991
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KEYWORDS
Mirrors

Diffraction

Coronagraphy

Optics manufacturing

Apodization

Point spread functions

Planets

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