The Planetary Imaging Concept Testbed Using a Recoverable Experiment - Coronagraph (PICTURE-C) mission is designed to directly image debris disks and exozodiacal dust around nearby stars from a high-altitude balloon using a 60 cm diameter off-axis telescope and a vector vortex coronagraph. During its second flight from Fort Sumner, New Mexico, on September 28, 2022, PICTURE-C successfully used its high and low-order wavefront control systems to perform focal plane wavefront correction for the first time on an observatory in a near-space environment. The coronagraph achieved a modest broadband (20%) contrast of 5 × 10 − 6, with performance limited by dynamic pointing transients. The low-order wavefront control system achieved optical pointing stabilization of 1 milliarcseconds (mas) root mean squared (RMS) over 30 second timescales. |
1.IntroductionThe Planetary Imaging Concept Testbed Using a Recoverable Experiment - Coronagraph (PICTURE-C) mission is a balloon-borne experiment designed to directly image debris-disks and exozodiacal dust around nearby stars in reflected visible light (540–660 nm).1–5 A primary goal of the mission is to mature key technologies required to directly image exoplanets from space. The mission was designed and built at the UMass Lowell Center for Space Science and Technology (LoCSST). To achieve the high levels of starlight suppression (contrast) necessary to detect faint exoplanetary signals, PICTURE-C uses a vector vortex coronagraph (VVC) coupled with a 60 cm diameter off-axis telescope (Fig. 1). The contrast ratio is increased further by employing adaptive optics (deformable mirrors driven by several wavefront sensors) to both stabilize the stellar wavefront at high speed and perform high-precision focal plane wavefront correction using the electric field conjugation (EFC) technique.6,7 The contrast achieved in flight depends both on the dynamic errors in the system as well as the static errors in the optics themselves. Dynamic errors caused by pointing jitter, mechanical flexing and thermal deformation have been discussed in a previous article describing the low-order wavefront sensor (LOWFS) chosen for the mission.4 The static errors, including polarization aberration, were also analyzed previously.3,8 The optical system is designed to achieve an in-flight contrast of or better, which is required to detect exozodiacal dust and debris around nearby stars. PICTURE-C performed its first flight on September 28, 2019,2 and validated many of the technologies and sub-systems required to meet the science goals of the mission. These included: thermal monitoring and control using over 80 temperature sensors and 16 heaters, on-sky target acquisition using the Wallops Arc Second Pointer (WASP)9 pointing system, automatic telescope alignment using a hexapod-actuated secondary mirror, and high-speed low-order wavefront control (LOWFC). A charge 4 VVC and a 5-band spectral imaging camera were also demonstrated during the 2019 flight. These were replaced by a charge 6 VVC and a single wide-band imaging system (540–660 nm) for the second flight.2 The charge 6 VVC is more tolerant to low-order aberrations10 and the simplified imaging system reduces scattered light and produces higher signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) images. The second flight of PICTURE-C was attempted first in 2021 from Fort Sumner, but three straight weeks of inclement weather (strong surface and upper-level winds) prevented the mission from launching. The payload was returned to UMass Lowell for eight months of continued development1 and returned to Fort Sumner in August 2022. The mission was successfully launched on September 28, 2022, three years to the day after the first flight. The flight profile was very similar to that of the first flight. The balloon was launched at 8 AM and terminated at 2 AM the following morning, earlier than desired, but required due to its proximity to White Sands Missile Range. The balloon reached a float altitude of 41.8 km, with an ambient air temperature and pressure of −40°C and 2–3 Torr. The payload was successfully recovered with no damage after descending on a parachute and landing 130 miles from the launch facility. Details of the experiment and flight results are discussed in the following sections. 2.Experiment DescriptionThe PICTURE-C experiment is shown in Fig. 1. For flight, the 1500 lb payload is mounted inside the NASA WASP pointing gondola,9 a two-axis active gimbal mount that provides sub-arcsecond pointing stability. The payload consists of a forward telescope section, the coronagraph instrument (mounted alongside the telescope), and the aft electronics section that houses the experiment flight computer and control electronics for the adaptive optics and thermal control systems. The telescope primary mirror (M1) is a 60 cm off-axis parabola (OAP) and the secondary mirror (M2) is a 14 cm off-axis ellipse (OAE) mounted in a Gregorian configuration. The flight coronagraph is described in Fig. 2. Additional details regarding the instrument design and laboratory testing can be found in recent publications.1,2 The coronagraph science bandpass is 20% () centered at 600 nm (540–660 nm). Inside the coronagraph, the telescope beam is routed through an adaptive optics system consisting of high and low-order wavefront control systems. The LOWFC system4,12 controls the secondary mirror hexapod, a Physik Instrumente (PI)13 H-811, and the low-order deformable mirror (LODM), an ALPAO14 DM97-15 with tip/tilt control. These actuators are driven by two low-order wavefront sensors: a low-speed (40–100 Hz) Shack-Hartmann LOWFS (SH LOWFS) and a high-speed reflective Lyot-stop LOWFS (LLOWFS).15 The SH LOWFS is used primarily for telescope alignment with the hexapod and to create a diffraction limited image with the LODM. The LLOWFS drives the LODM at high-speed to stabilize the first 23 Zernike wavefront modes while the high-order wavefront control (HOWFC) system is operating. Most importantly, the LLOWFS stabilizes the residual telescope pointing jitter to keep the star centered on the VVC with milliarcsecond (mas) precision. The SH LOWFS camera is an IMPERX16 B1020 and the LLOWFS camera is a IMPERX B0620, both operating over the Camera Link interface. To perform HOWFC, the coronagraph employs a single high-order deformable mirror (HODM) to correct both phase and amplitude errors using EFC6 and focal plane wavefront sensing (FPWFS).7 These techniques are used to create a zone of extremely high contrast (dark hole) in one half of the image.17,18 The microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) HODM is a 952-actuator Boston Micromachines Corporation (BMC) Kilo DM19 driven by a miniature controller.20,21 The instrument uses a charge 6 VVC and the dark hole extends from – (0.5″–2.1″ on the sky). The science detector is a Finger Lakes Instrumentation (FLI) MLx695 CCD that was cooled to −30°C during the flight using the built-in thermoelectric cooler. The detector has a nominal read noise of 3 e−/px root mean squared (RMS) and dark rate of 0.002 e−/px/s at −30°C. During operations, the experiment is under constant control from the ground with live data streams from all onboard sensors. All experiment data is relayed in real time over a 4 Mbps telemetry link and user commands are sent to the payload through a command uplink system. In this way, the experiment can be operated exactly the same way in flight as it is on the ground. During the flight, the mission observed 6 different stellar targets and all experiment systems functioned normally. The observation plan for each star followed the nominal sequence:
The experiment was able to reliably progress to step 8 for all targets, but did not achieve the long-term stability required to reach the final observing mode. The mission succeeded in demonstrating two firsts in a near-space environment. The experiment used its HODM to perform FPWFS and EFC to create the first coronagraphic dark hole from a flight platform. Second, the LOWFC system was able to achieve RMS pointing stability over 30 second timescales. 3.Flight ResultsPICTURE-C demonstrated the first coronagraphic dark hole from a flight platform in a near-space environment (Fig. 3). Prior to HODM actuation, the raw contrast produced by the VVC alone was . The EFC algorithm6 was then used to further reduce stellar leakage. To implement EFC, pair-wise probe patterns were placed on the HODM to perform FPWFS.7 A total of 4 probe images were collected and used to estimate the electric field at the focal plane. The field estimation was then multiplied by the inverted HODM response matrix (Jacobian) to calculate a corrective command for the HODM. This response matrix was generated by an optical simulation of the instrument that is built upon the Interactive Data Language (IDL) PROPER22 library and the VVC model developed under the NASA Strategic Astrophysics Technology (SAT)23,24 program. The EFC routine was iterated as the D-shaped dark hole region steadily reduced in brightness, creating a higher and higher contrast region of interest to search for dust signals. As the EFC process was tested throughout the flight, it became clear that while the LOWFC system was maintaining pointing stability at the 1–20 mas level, transient pointing disturbances were occurring regularly and temporarily disturbing the EFC convergence. These transients appeared as large amplitude (), very quick ( seconds) impulsive pointing deflections that were beyond the stabilization authority of the LOWFC system. These rapid transients would temporarily displace the star from the center of the VVC leading to increased leakage and disturbing the FPWFS routine. In many cases, the inaccurate wavefront estimates caused by these transients would cause the HOWFC system to start diverging, making the dark hole brighter instead of dimmer. These transients occurred on timescales of 1 to 5 minutes and thus prevented the instrument from reaching very deep contrasts, a process that can take 30–60 minutes. During one particularly stable run on the target alf Aql (Altair), which lasted only 67 seconds, the system was able to achieve a raw contrast level of averaged across the 2.5–10 λ/D dark hole (Fig. 3). This was the best contrast achieved during the flight. Pre-flight laboratory measurements were able to reach broadband contrasts of .1 It was hoped that this level could be improved upon during flight due to likely limitations introduced by the laboratory star simulator. However, telescope pointing transients were the limiting factor. The raw image contrast shown in Fig. 3 is calculated from individual 0.5 second exposures on the science imaging detector. After background subtraction of detector bias and dark counts, the image is divided by the peak of the unocculted star point spread function (PSF), which was obtained by using the LODM to tilt the star far () from the center of the VVC where the transmission is . By running the science detector at 1 ms exposures, unsaturated images of the unocculted star could be recorded and used to calibrate the contrast ratio. In cases where the star was too bright and would saturate the detector, HODM sinusoidal test patterns were used to create a calibrated image speckle of known relative brightness. Shown also in Fig. 3 is the field contrast, which is calculated from the electric field estimation obtained through pair-wise probe FPWFS images. This is a useful metric for quantifying and separating the coherent leakage (that which is modulated by the HODM probe patterns) from the incoherent background.25 With good agreement between the image and field contrast, it is clear that the coronagraph was not limited by incoherent leakage sources such as sky background or instrumental scattered light. This observation occurred at approximately 9:20 PM local time, 2 hours after sunset. Quantifying the sky background from residual atmosphere above the balloon will be addressed in a future publication. As shown in Fig. 4, the pointing stabilization provided by the LOWFC system was not ideal during the dark hole convergence. The system was stable at 16.6 mas in pitch and 11.1 mas in yaw (RMS values). A large amount of high-frequency (10–100 Hz) vibration is present in the power spectral density (PSD) curve, as well as a periodic packet of vibration at second intervals. The sources of these vibrations are still being investigated by the experiment and WASP teams. It is unclear if they were true mechanical vibrations or induced oscillations of the LOWFC system. These vibrations were not persistent throughout the flight. During a 28 second window earlier in the flight, the pointing environment was quiet enough to achieve 1.4 mas stabilization in pitch and 0.9 mas in yaw (Fig. 5). This stability satisfies the mission pointing requirement of 7.4 mas RMS in each axis, which is defined (along with the first 23 low-order Zernike modes) to allow at most contrast leakage due to low-order residuals. As the flight progressed past sunset (7 PM local time), the instrument started to experience large-amplitude () pointing drift oscillations on timescales of 1 to 2 minutes. These drifts were fairly constant and beyond the correction range of the LODM and thus prevented further operation of the HOWFC system. The pointing drift was measured only by the coronagraph LOWFS and not by the WASP system. During the flight, we hypothesized that the thermal shock of sunset on the payload was driving mechanical deformation of the telescope truss and moving the secondary mirror, creating a perceived pointing drift. Post-flight analysis has revealed, however, that the perceived drift was caused by a misalignment between the telescope and WASP pointing axes (boresights). As the telescope swings beneath the balloon, the sky rotates slightly in the WASP frame of reference about the pointing center, which is defined by the star tracker camera (Fig. 1). If the telescope and WASP boresights are misaligned, this roll maps into perceived pitch and yaw in the instrument. Analysis of the flight pointing data shows pointing drifts that are highly correlated with telescope roll – and not with telescope truss temperature. A boresight misalignment of less than 5 arcmin can explain all of the observed drifts. The telescope and instrument have no absolute boresight reference. It is likely that repeated re-alignment of the secondary mirror and slow thermal drift of the truss over many hours introduced a boresight offset that was imperceptible to the experiment team and led to the observed pointing drift. 4.DiscussionThe second flight of PICTURE-C has demonstrated the first coronagraphic dark hole in a near-space environment and pointing stability. Performance of the HOWFC system was limited both by transient pointing disturbances and large-amplitude pointing drifts owing to telescope and WASP misalignment. While image post-processing has been shown to improve the effective contrast of coronagraph observations,26–28 the paucity of high-contrast images from PICTURE-C would likely not provide enough information for accurate speckle reduction. Likewise, dust detection around Altair is unlikely due to the lack of deep exposures at high contrast and lack of observable dust in the system. Altair shows no mid or far infrared excess29,30 that would indicate warm dust detectable by PICTURE-C. The star was chosen as a dust-free calibration target to provide a PSF reference to enable reference star differential imaging (RDI)31 on the science target alf Lyr (Vega). The contrast performance achieved during this flight is roughly a factor of 1000 times worse than the current state-of-the-art in laboratory VVC testing.25 This remarkable difference serves to highlight the difficulty of operating a high-contrast coronagraph in a remote flight environment. PICTURE-C operates in partial atmosphere at −40°C on a moving platform in Earth’s gravity with pointing stability 10–100 times worse than what has been demonstrated in space. Our current challenges are still dominated by observatory stability and low-order wavefront control. These concerns are of paramount interest to future large space telescopes as well.32 PICTURE-C and its successor, PICTURE-D, will continue to drive the improvement of the WASP platform, much in the same way that the original PICTURE sounding rocket drove innovations in the rocket attitude control system that enabled 5 mas pointing stability in space.33 Work has begun to develop mitigation strategies and engineering solutions to remedy both pointing issues that hindered EFC convergence. While the image stabilization proves that pointing stability equivalent to the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST)34 is possible from the highly dynamic environment of a sub-orbital balloon, a great deal of work is required to achieve this level of performance over hour-long observation timescales. Simple software updates could greatly improve dark hole convergence by implementing LOWFC transient detection that would allow the HOWFC system to avoid recording data during pointing disturbances. The WASP team has already begun an overhaul of their pointing motors to reduce vibration and structural improvements are being investigated to reduce transients likely caused by creaking of the gondola suspension cables. The goal for future flights would be to limit the transient occurrence frequency to timescales much greater than 60 seconds, which is the planned maximum exposure time for the science images, and to reduce high frequency vibration from 10–100 Hz by roughly an order of magnitude to allow the LOWFC system to maintain the 7.4 mas RMS stability requirement over 1–2 hour timescales. To address boresight misalignment and drift, a communication interface will be established to send live pointing updates from the experiment LOWFS to WASP. Enabling this link will allow WASP to guide on the instrument boresight and completely eliminate the perceived drift. For future flights, the experiment will also incorporate a pupil locating camera that will provide an absolute reference for the telescope boresight. This camera will be used to break the degeneracy between the secondary mirror alignment and the telescope pointing; a positive tilt of M2 can be compensated by a negative tilt of the telescope. This would result in a displacement of the pupil on M2 and further downstream on the pupil camera where it can be sensed and corrected. This type of misalignment would also introduce wavefront error that could be sensed by the SH LOWFS and used to correct the alignment. The goal of the PICTURE family of sub-orbital experiments2,33,35 since their inception in 2005 has been to develop necessary technologies and operations concepts to help pave the way for direct imaging of exoplanets with future space missions such as the Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO) prioritized by the Astro 2020 Decadal Survey.36 This effort has been funded under the NASA Astrophysics Research and Analysis (APRA) program for an additional 5 years and will transition into PICTURE-D with flights in 2024 and 2026. The goal of these flights is to continue technology maturation through the incorporation of new deformable mirror electronics and vortex coronagraph technologies, and also to begin full-scale science operations by capturing images of several nearby debris disk systems. 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BiographyChristopher B. Mendillo is a research professor at UMass Lowell. He received his PhD in astronomy from Boston University in 2013 and his BSc degree in physics from Brown University in 2005. Kuravi Hewawasam is a post-doctoral research fellow at UMass Lowell. He received his BSc degree in physics from the University of Colombo, Sri Lanka, in 2007 and his MS degree in physics from University of Minnesota, Duluth, in 2012. Jason Martel is a mechanical engineer at UMass Lowell. He received his BSc degree in mechanical engineering from Boston University in 2010. Thaddeus Potter is a PhD candidate at UMass Lowell. He received his BSc degree in chemistry and physics from Stetson University in 2017. |