Polarization modeling and predictions for Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope, part 6: fringe mitigation with polycarbonate modulators and optical contact calibration retarders
David M. Harrington, Sarah A. Jaeggli, Tom A. Schad, Amanda J. White, Stacey R. Sueoka
Abstract
Interference fringes are a major source of systematic error in astronomical spectropolarimeters. We apply the Berreman formalism with recent spatial fringe aperture averaging estimates to design and fabricate new fringe-suppressed polarization optics for several Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) use cases. We successfully performed an optical contact bond on a 120-mm-diameter compound crystal retarder for calibration with wavelength-dependent fringe suppression factors of one to three orders of magnitude. Special rotational alignment procedures were developed to minimize spectral oscillations, which we show here to represent our calibration stability limit under retarder thermal perturbation. We developed a fabrication technique to deliver low beam deflection for our large aperture polycarbonate (PC) retarders. Modulators are upgraded in two DKIST instruments with minimal beam deflection and bandpass-optimized antireflection coatings for fringe suppression factors of hundreds. We confirm that PC retarders do fringe as expected when low deflection is achieved. We show that increased retardance spatial variation from PC does not degrade modulation efficiency.