Paper
28 July 2008 Laboratory characterization of the chessboard achromatic phase shifter
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Abstract
We recently presented a new concept for designing an achromatic phase shifter. An APS is required in nulling interferometry, a technique that aims at directly detecting and characterizing planets around a star in the thermal infrared. Our solution is based on two cellular mirrors (alternatively, transparent plates can be used) where cells have thickness which introduce OPD that are respectively odd and even multiples of half the central wavelength, on the fraction of the wave it reflects. A destructive interference is thus produced on axis for the central wavelength when recombining the two beams. We have shown that if the thicknesses are distributed according to the Pascal triangle, a fair quasi-achromatism is also reached on typically one octave in wavelength, provided there is a suffcient number of cells. The major interest of this solution is that it allows a compact, simple and fully symmetric design, without complex sub-systems to adjust. In this paper, after reminding the basic concept, we first present the theoretical estimations for the expected performances in the two possible regimes of recombination: on axis and multi-axial (Fizeau). We then describe the laboratory setup of the demonstration bench we are developing, as well as the first results obtained.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Daniel Rouan, D. Pelat, N. Meilard, Jean-Michel Reess, Fanny Chemla, and Pierre Riaud "Laboratory characterization of the chessboard achromatic phase shifter", Proc. SPIE 7013, Optical and Infrared Interferometry, 70131S (28 July 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.787066
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Planets

Stars

Phase shifts

Etching

Mirrors

Manufacturing

Point spread functions

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