The future Habitable Worlds Observatory aims to characterize the atmospheres
of rocky exoplanets around solar-type stars. The vector vortex coronagraph
(VVC) is a main candidate to reach the required contrast of 10−10.
However, the VVC requires polarization filtering and every observing band
requires a different VVC. The triple-grating vector vortex coronagraph (tgVVC)
aims to mitigate these limitations by combining multiple gratings that minimize
the polarization leakage over a large spectral bandwidth. In this paper, we
present laboratory results of a tgVVC prototype using the In-Air Coronagraphic
Testbed (IACT) facility at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the Space
Coronagraph Optical Bench (SCoOB) at the University of Arizona Space
Astrophysics Lab (UASAL). We study the coronagraphic performance with
polarization filtering at 633 nm and reach a similar average contrast of 2×10−8 between 3-18 λ/D at the IACT, and 6×10−8
between 3-14 λ/D at SCoOB. We explore the limitations of the tgVVC by
comparing the testbed results. We report on other manufacturing errors and ways
to mitigate their impact.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, SPIE Optics + Photonics - Techniques and
Instrumentation for Detection of Exoplanets X