Paper
7 February 2003 Guiding on the edge (V~19): results from an AO survey of very low mass stars searching for extremely faint companions
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Use of a highly sensitive curvature wavefront sensor (WFS) with avalanche photodiode (APD) detectors at the Gemini North telescope has allowed direct AO guiding on very low mass stars (V=18-20, I=14-16) producing 0.1” images in K’. This resolution (which is near to the 0.07” diffraction limit) has enabled us to conduct ground-based searches for substellar companions (<0.075 M) to within ~3 AU of their primary stars. We have been able to use the faint science targets themselves to close the AO loop. The key to this capability is the zero readout noise, photon-counting APDs used in the curvature WFS. The amplification of incident photons from low luminosity sources allows sufficient signal at the subapertures to reconstruct the aberrated wavefronts with relatively little reconstruction error. This is advantageous compared to typical Shack-Hartmann WFSs which require greater signal from their guide stars to compensate for their CCDs’ readout noise. The technique presented here is currently the only working one from the ground studying such cool and faint targets. Additionally, we report the discovery of 3 new binary stellar systems from a survey of 30 low mass stars (~0.095 M, spectral type M6.0-M7.5, V=18-20) at separations between 0.12-0.29” (3.5-8.3 AU) using this technique.
© (2003) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Nicholas Siegler, Laird Miller Close, and Melanie E. Freed "Guiding on the edge (V~19): results from an AO survey of very low mass stars searching for extremely faint companions", Proc. SPIE 4839, Adaptive Optical System Technologies II, (7 February 2003); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.460085
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Cited by 6 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Stars

Adaptive optics

Avalanche photodetectors

Photons

Sensors

Wavefront sensors

Gemini Observatory

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