Coronagraph instruments are extreme examples of
stray light rejection and precise
photometry because the total brightness from the solar corona is less than one-millionth the brightness of the Sun. The apparent surface brightness is even fainter because, in addition to delivering less total light, the corona has a much greater apparent size than the Sun itself. During a
total solar eclipse, the
Moon acts as an occluding disk and any camera in the eclipse path may be operated as a coronagraph until the eclipse is over. More common is an arrangement where the sky is imaged onto an intermediate
focal plane containing an opaque spot; this focal plane is reimaged onto a detector. Another arrangement is to image the sky onto a mirror with a small hole: the desired light is reflected and eventually reimaged, but the unwanted light from the star goes through the hole and does not reach the detector. Either way, the instrument design must take into account scattering and
diffraction to make sure that as little unwanted light as possible reaches the final detector. Lyot's key invention was an arrangement of lenses with stops, known as
Lyot stops, and baffles such that light scattered by diffraction was focused on the stops and baffles, where it could be absorbed, while light needed for a useful image missed them. As examples, imaging instruments on the
Hubble Space Telescope and
James Webb Space Telescope offer coronagraphic capability.
Band-limited coronagraph A
band-limited coronagraph uses a special kind of mask called a
band-limited mask. This mask is designed to block light and also manage diffraction effects caused by removal of the light. The band-limited coronagraph has served as the baseline design for the canceled
Terrestrial Planet Finder coronagraph. Band-limited masks are available on the
James Webb Space Telescope as well.
Phase-mask coronagraph A phase-mask coronagraph (such as the so-called four-quadrant phase-mask coronagraph) uses a transparent mask to shift the phase of the stellar light in order to create a self-destructive interference, rather than a simple opaque disc to block it.
Optical vortex coronagraph An
optical vortex coronagraph uses a phase-mask in which the phase shift varies azimuthally around the center. Several varieties of optical vortex coronagraphs exist: • the
scalar optical vortex coronagraph based on a phase ramp directly etched in a dielectric material, like fused silica. • the
vector(ial) vortex coronagraph employs a mask that rotates the angle of polarization of photons, and ramping this angle of rotation has the same effect as ramping a phase-shift. A mask of this kind can be synthesized by various technologies, ranging from
liquid crystal polymer (same technology as in
3D television), and micro-structured surfaces (using
microfabrication technologies from the
microelectronics industry). Such a vector vortex coronagraph made out of liquid crystal polymers is currently in use at the 200-inch
Hale Telescope at the
Palomar Observatory. It has recently been operated with
adaptive optics to image
extrasolar planets. This works with stars other than the sun because they are so far away their light is, for this purpose, a spatially coherent plane wave. The coronagraph using interference masks out the light along the center axis of the telescope, but allows the light from off-axis objects through. ==Satellite-based coronagraphs==