For the first time ever, NASA researchers have successfully demonstrated in the laboratory that a space telescope rigged
with special masks and mirrors could snap a photo of an Earth-like planet orbiting a nearby star. This accomplishment
marks a dramatic step forward for
missions like the proposed Terrestrial Planet Finder, designed to hunt for an Earth twin that might harbor life.
Three simulated planets -- one as bright as Jupiter, one half as bright as Jupiter and one as faint as Earth -- stand out
plainly in this image created from a sequence of 480 images captured by the High Contrast Imaging Testbed at JPL.
A roll-subtraction technique, borrowed from space astronomy, was used to distinguish planets
from background light. The asterisk marks the location of the system's simulated star. (Credit: NASA: JPL-Caltech)
Trying to image an exoplanet - a planet orbiting a star other than the sun - is a daunting task, because its relatively
dim glow is easily overpowered by the intense glare of its much bigger, brighter parent star. The challenge has been
compared to looking for a firefly next to a searchlight.
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Now, two researchers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., have shown that a fairly simple coronagraph -
an instrument used to "mask" a star's glare - paired with an adjustable mirror, could enable a space telescope to image a
distant planet 10 billion times fainter than its central star.
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"Our experiment demonstrates the suppression of glare extremely close to a star, clearing a field dark enough to allow us
to see an Earth twin. This is at least a thousand times better than anything demonstrated previously," said John Trauger,
lead author of a paper appearing in the April 12 issue of Nature. This paper describes the system, called the High Contrast
Imaging Testbed, and how the technique could be used with a telescope in space to see exoplanets. The lab experiment used a laser as a simulated star, with fainter copies of the star serving as "planets."
To date, scientists have used various techniques to detect more than 200 exoplanets. Most of these exoplanets are from
five to 4,000 times more massive than Earth, and are either too hot, too cold or too much of a giant gas ball to be
considered likely habitats for life. So far, no one has managed to capture an image of an exoplanetary system that
resembles our own solar system. Scientists are eager to take a closer look at nearby systems, to hunt for and then
characterize any Earth-like planets - those with the right size, orbit and other traits considered friendly for life.
In the lab demonstration, the High Contrast and Imaging Testbed overcame two significant hurdles that all telescopes
face when trying to image exoplanets - diffracted and scattered light.
When starlight hits the edge of a telescope's primary mirror, it becomes slightly disturbed, producing a pattern of
rings or spikes surrounding the major source of light in the focused image. This diffracted light can completely obscure
any planets in the field of view.
To address this problem, Trauger and his colleagues at JPL fashioned a pair of masks for their system. The first, which
resembles a blurry barcode, directly blocks most of the starlight, while the second clears away the diffracted rings and
spikes. The combination creates enough darkness to allow the light of any planets to shine through.
"Mathematically, and sort of magically, this coronagraph blocks both the central star and its rings," said Wesley Traub of
JPL, co-author of the new paper and Terrestrial Planet Finder project scientist.
Scattered light presents the additional hurdle. Minor ripples on a telescope's mirror produce "speckles" - faint copies of
a star, shifted to the side, which can also hide planets. In the High Contrast Imaging Testbed, a deformable mirror the
size of a large coin limits scattered light. With a surface that can be altered ever so slightly by computer-controlled
actuators, this mirror compensates for the effects of minor imperfections in the telescope and instrument.
"This result is important because it points the way to building a space telescope with the ability to detect and
characterize Earth-like planets around nearby stars," Traub said.
For their next steps, Trauger and Traub plan to improve the suppression of speckles by a factor of 10, and extend the
method to accommodate many wavelengths of light simultaneously.
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by NASA - Jet Propulsion Laboratory.