Status of the SCExAO instrument: recent technology upgrades and path to a system-level demonstrator for PSI
Author(s) -
Julien Lozi,
Olivier Guyon,
Sébastien Vievard,
Ananya Sahoo,
Vincent Déo,
Nemanja Jovanović,
Barnaby Norris,
Marc-Antoine Martinod,
Benjamin Mazin,
Alexander B. Walter,
Neelay Fruitwala,
Sarah Steiger,
Kristina Davis,
Peter Tuthill,
Tomoyuki Kudo,
Hajime Kawahara,
Takayuki Kotani,
Michael Ireland,
Theodoros Anagnos,
Christian Schwab,
Nick Cvetojević,
Elsa Huby,
S. Lacour,
Kévin Barjot,
Tyler D. Groff,
Jeffrey Chilcote,
N. Jeremy Kasdin,
Frantz Martinache,
Romain Laugier,
Mamadou N’Diaye,
Justin Knight,
Jared R. Males,
Steven P. Bos,
Frans Snik,
David Doelman,
Kelsey Miller,
Eduardo Bendek,
Ruslan Belikov,
Eugene Pluzhnik,
Thayne Currie,
Masayuki Kuzuhara,
Taichi Uyama,
Jun Nishikawa,
Naoshi Murakami,
Jun Hashimoto,
Yosuke Minowa,
Christophe Clergeon,
Yoshito H. Ono,
Naruhisa Takato,
Motohide Tamura,
Hideki Takami,
Masahiko Hayashi
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
hal (le centre pour la communication scientifique directe)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1117/12.2562832
Subject(s) - subaru telescope , wavefront , wavefront sensor , computer science , adaptive optics , first light , optics , telescope , speckle pattern , coronagraph , exoplanet , physics , artificial intelligence , remote sensing , computer vision , spectrograph , astronomy , light source , stars , geology , spectral line
The Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics (SCExAO) instrument is a high-contrast imaging system installed at the 8-m Subaru Telescope on Maunakea, Hawaii. Due to its unique evolving design, SCExAO is both an instrument open for use by the international scientific community, and a testbed validating new technologies, which are critical to future high-contrast imagers on Giant Segmented Mirror Telescopes (GSMTs). Through multiple international collaborations over the years, SCExAO was able to test the most advanced technologies in wavefront sensors, real-time control with GPUs, low-noise high frame rate detectors in the visible and infrared, starlight suppression techniques or photonics technologies. Tools and interfaces were put in place to encourage collaborators to implement their own hardware and algorithms, and test them on-site or remotely, in laboratory conditions or on-sky. We are now commissioning broadband coronagraphs, the Microwave Kinetic Inductance Detector (MKID) Exoplanet Camera (MEC) for high-speed speckle control, as well as a C-RED ONE camera for both polarization differential imaging and IR wavefront sensing. New wavefront control algorithms are also being tested, such as predictive control, multi-camera machine learning sensor fusion, and focal plane wavefront control. We present the status of the SCExAO instrument, with an emphasis on current collaborations and recent technology demonstrations. We also describe upgrades planned for the next few years, which will evolve SCExAO —and the whole suite of instruments on the IR Nasmyth platform of the Subaru Telescope— to become a system-level demonstrator of the Planetary Systems Imager (PSI), the high-contrast instrument for the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT).
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