Key Technologies for the Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope Coronagraph Instrument
The Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) Coronagraph Instrument (CGI) is a high-contrast imager and integral field spectrograph that will enable the study of exoplanets and circumstellar disks at visible wavelengths. Ground-based high-contrast instrumentation has fundamentally limited perfo...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) Coronagraph Instrument
(CGI) is a high-contrast imager and integral field spectrograph that will
enable the study of exoplanets and circumstellar disks at visible wavelengths.
Ground-based high-contrast instrumentation has fundamentally limited
performance at small working angles, even under optimistic assumptions for
30m-class telescopes. There is a strong scientific driver for better
performance, particularly at visible wavelengths. Future flagship mission
concepts aim to image Earth analogues with visible light flux ratios of more
than 10^10. CGI is a critical intermediate step toward that goal, with a
predicted 10^8-9 flux ratio capability in the visible. CGI achieves this
through improvements over current ground and space systems in several areas:
(i) Hardware: space-qualified (TRL9) deformable mirrors, detectors, and
coronagraphs, (ii) Algorithms: wavefront sensing and control; post-processing
of integral field spectrograph, polarimetric, and extended object data, and
(iii) Validation of telescope and instrument models at high accuracy and
precision. This white paper, submitted to the 2018 NAS Exoplanet Science
Strategy call, describes the status of key CGI technologies and presents ways
in which performance is likely to evolve as the CGI design matures. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1901.04050 |