The Gemini Planet Imager 2.0 (GPI 2.0) is an upgrade to the original GPI, an instrument for directly imaging exoplanet systems, which is being moved to the Gemini North telescope atop Mauna Kea, Hawaii. Major changes involve improved coronagraph designs and upgrading the adaptive optics (AO) system with a new pyramid wavefront sensor (PWFS). The addition of these new components require revised models for evaluating the performance and understanding the limitations of the system. This in turn helps us inform the broader GPI 2.0 science goals. We run end-to-end AO simulations, to assess the performance of GPI 2.0 AO under typical atmospheric conditions on Mauna Kea. We use these simulations to help us determine operating parameters such as the limiting stellar magnitude, maximum Strehl ratio, and the contrast achieved by the joint AO-coronagraph system before speckle-suppression. This information will be used to predict the science performance on a range of targets and design observing strategies.
The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) is a high contrast imaging instrument that aims to detect and characterize extrasolar planets. GPI is being upgraded to GPI 2.0, with several subsystems receiving a re-design to improve its contrast. To enable observations on fainter targets and increase performance on brighter ones, one of the upgrades is to the adaptive optics system. The current Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor (WFS) is being replaced by a pyramid WFS with an low-noise electron multiplying CCD (EMCCD). EMCCDs are detectors capable of counting single photon events at high speed and high sensitivity. In this work, we characterize the performance of the HNü 240 EMCCD from Nüvü Cameras, which was custom-built for GPI 2.0. Through our performance evaluation we found that the operating mode of the camera had to be changed from inverted-mode (IMO) to non-inverted mode (NIMO) in order to improve charge diffusion features found in the detector’s images. Here, we characterize the EMCCD’s noise contributors (readout noise, clock-induced charges, dark current) and linearity tests (EM gain, exposure time) before and after the switch to NIMO.
The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) is a high-contrast imaging instrument designed to directly detect and characterise young, Jupiter-mass exoplanets. After six years of operation at the Gemini South Telescope in Chile, the instrument is being upgraded and moved to the Gemini North Telescope in Hawaii as GPI 2.0. Several improvements have been made to the adaptive optics (AO) system as part of this upgrade. This includes replacing the current Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor with a pyramid wavefront sensor (PWFS) and a custom EMCCD. These changes will increase GPI’s sky coverage by accessing fainter targets, improving corrections on fainter stars and allowing faster and ultra-low latency operations on brighter targets. The PWFS subsystem was independently built and tested to verify its performance before being integrated into the GPI 2.0 instrument. This paper will present the pre-integration performance test results, including pupil image quality, throughput and linearity without modulation.
The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) is a dedicated high-contrast imaging facility instrument. After six years, GPI has helped establish that the occurrence rate of Jovian planets peaks near the snow. GPI 2.0 is expected to achieve deeper contrasts, especially at small inner working angles, to extend GPI’s operating range to fainter stars, and to broaden its scientific capabilities. GPI shipped from Gemini South in 2022 and is undergoing an upgrade as part of a relocation to Gemini North. We present the status of the upgrades including replacing the current wavefront sensor with an EMCCD-based pyramid wavefront sensor, adding a broadband low spectral resolution prism, new apodized-pupil Lyot coronagraph designs, upgrades of the calibration wavefront sensor and increased queue operability. Further we discuss the progress of reintegrating these components into the new system and the expected performance improvements in the context of GPI 2.0’s enhanced science capabilities.
The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI), is a facility class instrument for the Gemini Observatory with the primary goal of directly detecting young Jovian planets. After spending 2013 - 2020 at Gemini South, the instrument is currently undergoing maintenance and upgrades before its transition to Gemini North as GPI 2.0. Among the upgrades are significant changes to the Integral Field Spectrograph (IFS), including the installation of new prisms, Lyot stops/apodizers, and filters. The upgrades are expected to improve overall performance in the relevant wavelengths and angular separations needed for GPI 2.0.
The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) is a high-contrast imaging instrument designed to directly detect and characterize young, Jupiter-mass exoplanets. After six years of operation at Gemini South in Chile, the instrument is being upgraded and relocated to Gemini North in Hawaii as GPI 2.0. GPI helped establish that Jovian-mass planets have a higher occurrence rate at smaller separations, motivating several sub-system upgrades to obtain deeper contrasts (up to 20 times improvement to the current limit), particularly at small inner working angles. This enables access to additional science areas for GPI 2.0, including low-mass stars, young nearby stars, solar system objects, planet formation in disks, and planet variability. The necessary instrumental changes required toenable these new scientific goals are to (i) the adaptive optics system, by replacing the current Shack-Hartmann Wavefront Sensor (WFS) with a pyramid WFS and a custom EMCCD, (ii) the integral field spectrograph, by employing a new set of prisms to enable an additional broadband (Y-K band) low spectral resolution mode, as well as replacing the pupil viewer camera with a faster, lower noise C-RED2 camera (iii) the calibration interferometer, by upgrading the low-order WFS used for internal alignment and on-sky target tracking with a C-RED2 camera and replacing the calibration high-order WFS used for measuring and correcting non-common path aberrations with a self coherent camera, (iv) the apodized-pupil Lyot coronagraph designs and (v) the software, to enable high-efficiency queue operations at Gemini North. GPI 2.0 is expected to go on-sky in early 2024. Here I will present the new scientific goals, the key upgrades, the current status and the latest timeline for operations.
The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) is a high contrast imaging instrument designed to directly detect and characterize young Jupiter-mass exoplanets. After six years of operation at Gemini South in Chile, the instrument is being upgraded and moved to Gemini North in Hawaii as GPI 2.0. As part of this upgrade, several improvements will be made to the adaptive optics (AO) system. This includes replacing the current Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor (WFS) with a pyramid wavefront sensor (PWFS) and a custom EMCCD. These changes are expected to increase GPI’s sky coverage by accessing fainter targets, improving corrections on fainter stars and allowing faster and ultra-low latency operations on brighter targets. The PWFS subsystem is being independently built and tested to verify its performance before its integration into the GPI 2.0 instrument. In this paper, we will present the design and pre-integration test plan of the PWFS.
GPI is a facility instrument designed for the direct detection and characterization of young Jupiter mass exoplanets. GPI has helped establish that the occurrence rate of Jovian planets peaks near the snow line (~3 AU), and falls off toward larger separations. This motivates an upgrade of GPI to achieve deeper contrasts, especially at small inner working angles, to extend GPI’s operating range to fainter stars, and to broaden its scientific capabilities, all while leveraging its historical success. GPI was packed and shipped in 2022, and is undergoing a major science-driven upgrade. We present the status and purpose of the upgrades including an EMCCD-based pyramid wavefront sensor, broadband low spectral resolution prisms, new apodized-pupil Lyot coronagraph designs, upgrades of the calibration wavefront sensor and increased queue operability. We discuss the expected performance improvements and enhanced science capabilities to be made available in 2024.
The Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) is a facility class instrument for the Gemini Observatory with the primary goal of directly detecting young Jovian planets. After several years of successful operations on sky at Gemini South, GPI is undergoing an upgrade at the University of Notre Dame and is being moved to Gemini North. We present the current performance results, from in-lab testing, for several of the upgraded components to the Integral Field Spectrograph (IFS) and the Calibration Wavefront Sensor (CAL) for GPI 2.0. These upgrades include changes to the IFS dispersion prisms, changes to the pupil viewing cameras, and changes to the low order wavefront sensor. These improvements are designed to improve the magnitude and contrast range of GPI. We describe the alignment of several components, their noise characteristics, and their performance in the GPI environment.
Over the past six years the Gemini Planet Imager instrument has carried out adaptive-optics fed high-contrast imaging observations from the Gemini South telescope in Chile. GPI will now be upgraded for increased sensitivity and science capabilities as GPI 2.0, and will be moved to the Gemini North telescope in Hawaii. Here we describe tests we conducted remotely of the GPI instrument before shipment from Chile, and in-person following its arrival at the University of Notre Dame, where the upgrade will take place. These tests were originally designed to accommodate science program requirements and to ensure compatibility with the host observatory. We have now re-performed tests so as to assess the state of the instrument following six years of scientific performance. We present the high-level results of this baselining process, describe their implications and limitations, and compare them with results from tests performed when the original instrument was shipped to Chile in 2013.
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