Pupil Masks for Spectrophotometry of Transiting Exoplanets

Abstract

Spectrophotometric stability, which is crucial in the spectral characterization of transiting exoplanets, is affected by photometric variations arising from field-stop loss in space telescopes with pointing jitter or primary mirror deformation. This paper focuses on a new method for removing slit-loss or field-stop-loss photometric variation through the use of a pupil mask. Two types of pupil function are introduced: the first uses conventional (e.g., Gaussian or hyper-Gaussian) apodizing patterns; whereas the second, which we call a block-shaped mask, employs a new type of pupil mask designed for high photometric stability. A methodology for the optimization of a pupil mask for transit observations is also developed. The block-shaped mask can achieve a photometric stability of 10-5 for a nearly arbitrary field-stop radius when the pointing jitter is smaller than approximately 0.7 λ/D and a photometric stability of 10-6 at a pointing jitter smaller than approximately 0.5 λ/D . The impact of optical aberrations and mask imperfections upon mask performance is also discussed.

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