Direct exoplanet detection is limited by speckle noise in the point spread
function (PSF) of the central star. This noise can be reduced by subtracting
PSF images obtained simultaneously in adjacent narrow spectral bands using a
multi-channel camera (MCC), but only to a limit imposed by differential optical
aberrations in the MCC. To alleviate this problem, we suggest the introduction
of a holographic diffuser at the focal plane of the MCC to convert the PSF
image into an incoherent illumination scene that is then re-imaged with the
MCC. The re-imaging is equivalent to a convolution of the scene with the PSF of
each spectral channel of the camera. Optical aberrations in the MCC affect only
the convolution kernel of each channel and not the PSF globally, resulting in
better correlated images. We report laboratory measurements with a dual channel
prototype (1.575 micron and 1.625 micron) to validate this approach. A speckle
noise suppression factor of 12-14 was achieved, an improvement by a factor ~5
over that obtained without the holographic diffuser. Simulations of realistic
exoplanet populations for three representative target samples show that the
increase in speckle noise attenuation achieved in the laboratory would roughly
double the number of planets that could be detected with current adaptive
optics systems on 8-m telescopes.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure, to be published in ApJ June 20, 200