Title: Coronagraphic Imaging with the<i>Hubble Space Telescope</i>and the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph
Abstract:The unfiltered Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) CCD in tandem with focal plane wedges and a Lyot stop provides a simple white‐light coronagraph with a bandpass of 0.2–1.0 μm, which has been...The unfiltered Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) CCD in tandem with focal plane wedges and a Lyot stop provides a simple white‐light coronagraph with a bandpass of 0.2–1.0 μm, which has been used since late 1998 to image nebulosity around stars in the ranges 0.34≤V≤14 and -0.03≤B− V≤1.65. The residual starlight seen in STIS coronagraphic images includes diffraction spikes due to the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) secondary support structure, lacks distinct Airy rings, and varies smoothly with radius from the star. The point‐spread function (PSF) shape is a strong function of the source spectral energy distribution: we find that the PSF template needs to differ from the occulted source color by Δ(B− V)≤0.08 mag. Optimal PSF removal is achieved for contemporary template observations matched to HST orbital phase of the science observations. Use of noncontemporary PSF templates can degrade the limiting contrast by up to a factor of 10–12 at r≤2''. These systematic effects are negligible when the nebular surface brightness is comparable to the residual starlight, and they become progressively more important as surface brightness decreases. STIS has been used to detect circumstellar envelopes and protoplanetary disks with surface brightnesses spanning 10−4 to 10−7 per HST resolution element per Fstar at 2'' from the star, debris disks with FIR/Fstar≥0.001, and emission‐line nebulosity associated with bipolar outflows. The limiting contrast for single‐orbit integrations with the star placed at a location where the coronagraphic wedge is 1 0 wide is 10−8 per HST resolution element per Fstar for 6≤V≤8 stars. Deeper imagery can be obtained by placing the star off the active detector area. When the star is 5'' from the detector, a limiting contrast for a single‐orbit integration of 2.5 × 10-10 per HST resolution element per Fstar is reached. At this contrast level, background objects and the stellar color variability prevent further improvement by co‐adding data from multiple orbits.Read More