After nearly a decade of development, construction and testing, the world's most advanced instrument for directly imaging and
analyzing1 planets orbiting around other stars is pointing skyward and collecting light from distant worlds. "Even these early first-light images are almost a factor of 10 better than the previous generation of instruments. In one minute, we were seeing planets that used to take us an hour to detect," says Bruce Macintosh of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, who led the team who built the instrument.
For the past decade, Lawrence Livermore has been leading a multi-institutional team in the design, engineering, building and
optimization2 of the instrument, called the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI), which will be used for high-contrast imaging to better study faint planets or dusty disks next to bright stars.
Astronomers3 -- including a team at LLNL-- have made direct images of a handful of extrasolar planets by adapting
astronomical4 cameras built for other purposes. GPI is the first
fully5 optimized6 planet imager, designed from the ground up for exoplanet imaging
deployed7 on one of the world's biggest telescopes, the 8-meter Gemini South telescope in Chile.
Probing the environments of distant stars in a search for planets has required the development of next-generation, high-contrast adaptive optics (AO) systems, in which Livermore is a leader. These systems are sometimes referred to as extreme AO.
Macintosh said direct imaging of planets is challenging because planets such as Jupiter are a billion times fainter than their parent stars. "Detection of the youngest and brightest planets is barely within reach of today's AO systems," he said. "To see other solar systems, we need new tools."
And those new tools are installed in the Gemini Planet Imager with the most advanced AO system in the world. In addition to leading the whole project, LLNL also was responsible for the AO system. Designed to be the world's "most sophisticated" astronomical system for
compensating8 turbulence9 in the Earth's atmosphere -- an
ongoing10 problem for ground-based telescopes -- the system senses
atmospheric11 turbulence and corrects it with a a 2-centimeter-square
deformable12 mirror with 4,000 actuators. This deformable mirror is made of etched
silicon13, similar to microchips, rather than the large reflective glass mirrors used on other AO systems. This allows GPI to be compact and stable. The new mirror corrects for atmospheric distortions by adjusting its shape 1,000 times per second with accuracy better than 1 nanometer. Together with the other parts of GPI, astronomers can directly image extra-solar planets that are 1 million to 10 million times fainter than their host stars.
GPI carried out its first observations in November 2013 -- during an extremely smooth
debut14 for an
extraordinarily15 complex astronomical instrument the size of a small car. "The GPI team's huge amount of high quality work has begun to pay off and now holds the promise of many years of important science to come," said LLNL Project Manager David Palmer.
For GPI's first observations, it targeted
previously16 known planetary systems -- the 4-planet HR8799 system (co-discovered by an LLNL-led team at the Gemini and Keck
Observatory17 in 2008) and the Beta Pictoris system, among others. GPI has obtained the first-ever
spectrum18 of the very young planet Beta Pictoris b.
The first-light team also used the instrument's unique polarization mode --
tuned19 to look at starlight
scattered20 by tiny particles -- in order to study a ring of dust orbiting the very young star HR4796. With previous instruments, only the edges of this dust ring (which may be the
debris21 remaining from planet formation) could be seen. GPI can follow the entire
circumference22 of the ring. The images were released today at the 223rd meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Washington D.C., Jan. 5-9.