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Astronomy with High Contrast Imaging II
C. Aime and R. Soummer (eds)
EAS Publications Series, 12 (2004) III-III
Foreword
C. Aime and R. Soummer
This book reports the proceedings of the second
Journées d'Imagerie
Très Haute
Dynamique et Détection d'Exoplanètes
(Days on High
Contrast Imaging and Exoplanets Detection) that were held in Nice
in October, 6-10, 2003 with the joint efforts of the Collège
de France, the Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur, the CNRS
(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique) and the Laboratoire
Universitaire d'Astrophysique de Nice which organized the meeting.
The first
Journées led to the publication of
Volume 8, 2003 EAS
Publications Series:
Astronomy with High Contrast Imaging:
From Planetary Systems to Active Galactic Nuclei
that collected
33 papers presented during the session of May, 13-16, 2002. It
covered a very large domain of research in high contrast imaging
for exoplanet detection: astrophysical science (from
protoplanetary disks to AGNs), instruments and techniques (from
coronagraphy to nulling), data processing. These
Journées took place because of the need of a working
session giving enough time to the participants to explain their
work and understand that of their colleagues.
The second
Journées took the
form of an
École thématique du CNRS. The courses were held in French, but the reports are in English. The
present edition reports 29 courses and short presentations
given at this occasion. The texts correspond to original
presentations, and a few communications, too similar to those of
2002, were not reported here to avoid duplication. This makes the
two books complementary.
The general theme of the school was similar to that of the former
meeting, with a marked teaching objective. The courses and
presentations were also more centered in optics and instrumental
techniques. The main idea was to study what we could call
"exoplanetographs", instruments using apodisation,
coronagraphy, nulling or other techniques to directly record the
light of an exoplanet. Fundamental aspects of signal processing
were deferred to a third edition of the school.
A very short explanation of how the reports are ordered is given
here. The
Journées of 2003 started with the
delocalized lectures (delocalized means here "not in Paris"!) of the Collège de France, of Antoine
Labeyrie who wrote a
report on
Removal of coronagraphy residues with an
adaptive hologram
. Three invited seminars follow: Olivier Guyon (
Pupil
remapping techniques
), Daniel Rouan (
Ultra-nulling
interferometers
), and Kjetil Dohlen (
Phase masks in astronomy). An illustration from Daniel Rouan's talk on the
properties of Prouhet-Thué-Morse series was also selected for the
cover figure of this edition.
These papers are followed by the courses and communications given
during the 4
days of the school, in a slightly different order of
their presentation. The first two days were on atmospheric
turbulence and adaptive optics for coronagraphy, and also
coronagraphic space projects. Steve Ridgway gives a general
introduction to the problem (
Astronomy with high contrast
imaging
). This is followed by a presentation on Fourier and
Statistical Optics:
Shaped
and Apodized apertures
(Claude Aime),
The effect of a coronagraph on the statistics of adaptive optics pinned speckles
(Claude Aime and Rémi Soummer). A general introduction to the
problem of atmospheric turbulence is made by Julien Borgnino. A presentation of the Concordia site with emphasis on its advantages
for high contrast imaging is given by Eric Fossat.
Several presentations relative to numerical simulations of
Adaptive Optics and coronagraphy follow: Marcel Carbillet
(
AO for very high contrast imaging), Lyu Abe and Anthony
Boccaletti share two presentations on
Numerical
simulations for coronagraphy
. These
presentations are followed by reports on experiments: Sandrine
Thomas (
SAM-the SOAR adaptive module), Pierre Baudoz (
Cryogenic IR test of the 4QPM coronagraph), Anthony Boccaletti
(
Coronagraphy with JWST in the thermal IR). Pierre
Bourget (
Hg-Mask Coronagraph) ends this part with
a coronagraph using a mercury drop as a Lyot mask.
The next session focused on nulling interferometry and we gather here the
corresponding contribution. Two complementary reports on
theory and experiment of Bracewell interferometry were made by
Yves Rabbia (
Theoretical aspects of Darwin) and Marc
Ollivier (
Experimental aspects of Darwin). Olivier Absil
gave a report on the ground based nulling interferometer
experiment (
Effects of atmospheric turbulence on GENIE)
and Valérie Weber on MAII (
Nulling interferometric
broadbord
). A comparison between nulling and different classes of
coronagraphs was made by Olivier Guyon (
Coronagraphy vs.
nulling
).
A few prospective papers have been regrouped at the end of the
book:
Interferometric remapped array
nulling
(Lyu Abe),
Multiple-stage apodized Lyot
coronagraph
(Claude Aime and Rémi Soummer),
Piston sensor using dispersed speckles (Virginie Borkowski),
Principle of a coaxial achromatic interfero coronagraph (Jean Gay),
Coronagraphic imaging on the VLTI with VIDA
(Olivier Lardière),
Phase contrast apodisation
(Frantz Martinache)
The last section regroups science aspects and results on sky, using high contrast imaging:
Low mass companions searches using high dynamic range imaging (Jean-Luc Beuzit).
The last paper by Claire Moutou (
Ground-based direct
imaging of exoplanets
) can be read as a prospective conclusion of
the
Journées.
© EAS, EDP Sciences 2004