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Published March 10, 2011 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Improving Interferometric Null Depth Measurements using Statistical Distributions: Theory and First Results with the Palomar Fiber Nuller

Abstract

A new "self-calibrated" statistical analysis method has been developed for the reduction of nulling interferometry data. The idea is to use the statistical distributions of the fluctuating null depth and beam intensities to retrieve the astrophysical null depth (or equivalently the object's visibility) in the presence of fast atmospheric fluctuations. The approach yields an accuracy much better (about an order of magnitude) than is presently possible with standard data reduction methods, because the astrophysical null depth accuracy is no longer limited by the magnitude of the instrumental phase and intensity errors but by uncertainties on their probability distributions. This approach was tested on the sky with the two-aperture fiber nulling instrument mounted on the Palomar Hale telescope. Using our new data analysis approach alone—and no observations of calibrators—we find that error bars on the astrophysical null depth as low as a few 10^(−4) can be obtained in the near-infrared, which means that null depths lower than 10^(−3) can be reliably measured. This statistical analysis is not specific to our instrument and may be applicable to other interferometers.

Additional Information

© 2011 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2010 July 6; accepted 2011 January 9; published 2011 February 15. This work was carried out at the Jet propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The data presented in this paper are based on observations obtained at the Hale Telescope, Palomar Observatory, as part of a continuing collaboration between Caltech, NASA/JPL, and Cornell University. We wish to thank the Palomar Observatory staff for their assistance in mounting the PFN and conducting the observations at the Hale telescope. The research was supported by the Fond National de la Recherche scientifique de Belgique (FNRS), by the Fonds pour la formation à la Recherche dans l'Industrie et dans l'Agriculture de Belgique (FRIA), and by the Communauté Francaise de Belgique-Action de recherche concertée-Académie Wallonie-Europe and by the Center for Exoplanet Science. The authors thank the referee for a careful review and for giving us relevant comments that helped to significantly improve the paper.

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Published - apj_729_2_110.pdf

Submitted - 1103.4719v1.pdf

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