Paper
3 March 2003 Coronagraphy with HST/NICMOS: detectability is a sensitive issue
Glenn Schneider, Murray D. Silverstone
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
HST provides an unparalleled venue for high contrast imaging which has enabled new observational domains in exo-planet and debris disk imaging. Unburdened by atmospheric 'seeing', NICMOS and STIS achieve very low levels of background contamination from the wings of stellar point spread functions (PSF). Coronagraphy provides additional contrast gains approaching an order of magnitude at small angular distances from occulted stars. The stability of the platform allows scattered and diffracted light to be further reduced by two additional orders of magnitude through PSF-subtraction. The non-destructive read-out modes of the NICMOS detectors permit sampling the PSF, with its strong radial brightness gradient, over a dynamic range exceeding 5x107 in a single spacecraft orbit. In H-band, sub-stellar companions of ΔH ~ 8+2 x (angular separation in arcseconds) are unambiguously detected in twenty minutes of integration. Raw sensitivity metrics, such as presumtively static Strehl ratios, are often invoked in comparing the performance of different instrumental systems but belie the true detectability levels which are dominated by systemic non-repeatable PSF variations (not photon statistics). Such variations can give rise to false detections of companions (and circumstellar disks) and introduce very significant photometric errors. The ability to rotate the HST field with high precision about the target axis and acquire temporally stable reference PSFs readily permits the identification and rejection of rotationally-invariant optical artifacts. We discuss the repeatable, quantifiable performance limits routinely reached by HST (currently unachievable on ground-based systems), for which PSF stability is critical.
© (2003) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Glenn Schneider and Murray D. Silverstone "Coronagraphy with HST/NICMOS: detectability is a sensitive issue", Proc. SPIE 4860, High-Contrast Imaging for Exo-Planet Detection, (3 March 2003); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.457840
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CITATIONS
Cited by 23 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Coronagraphy

Point spread functions

Stars

Space operations

Imaging systems

Sensors

Target detection

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