Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 October 2004
Telescope pupils are usually not well suited for high dynamical range imaging. Central obstruction, telescope spiders, hard edges and sparseness (for interferometers) can make it very challenging to build a coronagraph. Fortunately, it is often possible to remap a telescope pupil to achieve high contrast imaging without loosing light. In the case of a monolithic telescope, pupil remapping can produce an apodized pupil with 2 aspheric mirrors which redistribute the light without introducing phase aberrations. Similarly, an interferometer pupil can be remapped into a tight configuration compatible with coronagraphic techniques.