The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Coronagraph Instrument is a critical technology demonstrator for NASA’s Habitable Worlds Observatory. With a predicted visible-light flux ratio detection limit of 10−8 or better, it will be capable of reaching new areas of parameter space for both gas giant exoplanets and circumstellar disks. It is in the final stages of integration and test at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, with an anticipated delivery to payload integration in the coming year. This paper will review the instrument systems, observing modes, potential observing applications, and overall progress toward instrument integration and test.
The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is NASA’s flagship astrophysics mission planned for launch in 2026. The Coronagraph Instrument (CGI) on Roman will demonstrate the technology for direct imaging and spectroscopy of exoplanets around nearby stars. It will work with the 2.4-meter diameter telescope to achieve starlight suppression and point source detection limits that are 2–3 orders of magnitude deeper than previous space-based and groundbased coronagraphs by using active wavefront control with deformable mirrors. CGI has passed its Critical Design Review (CDR) in April of 2021, and System Integration Review (SIR) in June of 2022. We describe the status of CGI’s development and plans for the upcoming integration and testing phase.
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