After successful exoplanet searches using indirect methods from the 1990s, recent technological advances are finally enabling direct imaging of nearby exoplanets. While the list of directly imaged targets is currently small due to the limited contrast achieved with current ground-based instruments, space coronagraph instruments will greatly expand the capability of direct imaging and spectroscopy of exoplanets, eventually enabling imaging and spectroscopic study of super-Earths and potentially habitable Earth-like planets. The Wide-Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) coronagraph instrument will be a major technical and scientific step in this direction. The mission will utilize a 2.4 m telescope primarily aimed at conducting a wide-field near-infrared survey. While its centrally obscured pupil considerably complicates the design of a high-contrast coronagraph, it is expected that one can achieve the detection contrast to image an exoplanet as near as the 3rd Airy ring of the point spread function in broadband light, allowing for the first time reflected light imaging and spectroscopic characterization of exoplanets. This special section presents an overview of the WFIRST coronagraph technologies, as well as related space high-contrast imaging and spectroscopy, wavefront sensing and control, algorithms, modeling, operations, and data analysis. Recent WFIRST coronagraph laboratory and simulation results are described, and the expected mission science yield is shown for imaging giant planets known to orbit nearby stars. |
Coronagraphy
Imaging spectroscopy
Exoplanets
Space telescopes
Spectroscopes
Telescopes
Imaging systems