Diffraction in the ASPIICS coronagraph: observations and modeling
Pith reviewed 2026-05-08 14:03 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Early ASPIICS observations confirm the analytical-numerical model's predictions for diffracted light in the solar coronagraph.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Early ASPIICS observations, where diffraction is pronounced, fully confirm all the qualitative properties of diffracted light suggested by the model. After fine-tuning of the model quantitative correspondence is reached at the level of 30% -- 50%, depending on the configuration. In the majority of the field of view the diffracted light is two orders of magnitude below the coronal signal. The analysis validates the analytical-numerical model and justifies its assumptions while estimating the contribution of diffracted light.
What carries the argument
The analytical-numerical diffraction model, which simulates the diffraction of solar disk light on the external occulter while accounting for the millimetric formation-flying positioning and radiometric properties of the light.
If this is right
- The validated model can now be applied to correct for straylight in future ASPIICS observations of the solar corona.
- Diffraction from the external occulter does not significantly degrade the quality of coronal images in the majority of the field of view.
- The fine-tuning process improves the model's accuracy for different instrument configurations.
- Similar diffraction modeling approaches can be relied upon for other space-based coronagraphs using external occulters.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The success of the model suggests that the formation-flying precision of Proba-3 is adequate for maintaining low straylight levels.
- Further refinements to the model could focus on specific regions where the 30-50% agreement is lower to achieve even better predictions.
- These results support the feasibility of giant-baseline coronagraphs for high-resolution solar corona studies without excessive diffraction interference.
Load-bearing premise
The analytical-numerical diffraction model correctly captures the physical geometry of the external occulter, the millimetric formation-flying positioning, and the radiometric properties of diffracted light.
What would settle it
Detection of diffracted light intensity in ASPIICS images that significantly exceeds the model's fine-tuned prediction in a region where it should be low, or fails to show the expected geometric patterns.
Figures
read the original abstract
Context: ASPIICS is a giant-baseline visible light solar coronagraph, which relies on the millimetric positioning performance of the precision formation flying Proba-3 mission of the European Space Agency. Proba-3 was launched on 5 Dec 2024, and since then ASPIICS observes the solar corona with the field of view (1.1-3) R_sun. Aims: Diffraction, in particular diffraction of solar disk light on the external occulter, is known to provide a major source of straylight in coronagraphs. We aim to analyze diffracted light visible in ASPIICS images, compare it with the analytical-numerical diffraction model reported earlier, and fine-tune the model. Methods: We compare diffraction effects visible in ASPIICS data with simulated diffraction images; in particular, we compare the geometrical properties and the radiometric signal. The properties of the diffraction described in previous works suggest how to fine-tune the model in order to achieve a better correspondence with the observations. Results: Early ASPIICS observations, where diffraction is pronounced, fully confirm all the qualitative properties of diffracted light suggested by the model. After fine-tuning of the model we see quantitative correspondence of the level of 30\% -- 50\%, depending on the configuration. Conclusions: The performed analysis allows (a) to validate our analytical-numerical model and justify the assumptions, and (b) to estimate the contribution of the diffracted light in the ASPIICS images. In the majority of the field of view the diffracted light is two orders of magnitude below the coronal signal.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper analyzes early ASPIICS coronagraph observations from the Proba-3 mission, focusing on diffraction of solar disk light by the external occulter. It compares observed geometrical and radiometric properties of diffracted light against an analytical-numerical diffraction model, reports full qualitative agreement with prior model predictions, and achieves 30-50% quantitative correspondence after fine-tuning model parameters for geometry, formation-flying positioning, and radiometry. The work concludes that the model is validated, that diffracted light lies two orders of magnitude below the coronal signal across most of the (1.1-3) R_sun field of view, and that the analysis justifies the model's assumptions while quantifying straylight contribution.
Significance. If the reported qualitative matches hold, the paper supplies useful early in-flight validation for a formation-flying coronagraph whose performance depends critically on millimetric occulter positioning. Explicit disclosure of the fine-tuning step and the resulting agreement level is a methodological strength that allows readers to assess the evidential weight. The estimate that diffracted light remains negligible relative to the coronal signal supports the instrument's scientific utility, provided the post-tuning quantitative level is interpreted accordingly.
major comments (2)
- [Results] Results section (paragraph beginning 'Early ASPIICS observations...'): The 30-50% quantitative correspondence is obtained only after fine-tuning the model parameters to the same ASPIICS data used for comparison. This reduces the quantitative match to a post-hoc fit rather than an independent prediction, weakening the evidential support for the validation claim even though the qualitative geometrical and radiometric properties remain externally grounded.
- [Conclusions] Conclusions (item (a)): The assertion that the analysis 'validate[s] our analytical-numerical model and justify the assumptions' should be qualified. The qualitative confirmation is independent, but the quantitative agreement level depends on parameter adjustment; without an a-priori prediction or cross-validation on held-out data, the strength of validation is primarily qualitative.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract and Results] The abstract and Results section use 'fine-tune' without specifying which exact parameters (e.g., occulter edge profile, alignment offsets, or radiometric scaling) were varied or by how much; adding a short table or explicit list would improve reproducibility.
- [Figures] Figure captions and text should clarify whether the simulated images shown are pre- or post-tuning versions, to avoid ambiguity when readers compare them to the data.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed and constructive review. The comments correctly identify that quantitative agreement requires parameter adjustment to the observed data. We address each point below and will revise the manuscript to qualify the validation claims accordingly, while preserving the strength of the independent qualitative matches.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Results] Results section (paragraph beginning 'Early ASPIICS observations...'): The 30-50% quantitative correspondence is obtained only after fine-tuning the model parameters to the same ASPIICS data used for comparison. This reduces the quantitative match to a post-hoc fit rather than an independent prediction, weakening the evidential support for the validation claim even though the qualitative geometrical and radiometric properties remain externally grounded.
Authors: We agree that the reported 30-50% quantitative correspondence is obtained after fine-tuning model parameters (primarily occulter-to-detector distance, lateral positioning, and radiometric scaling) using the same ASPIICS observations. These adjustments are not free parameters but are constrained by independent formation-flying telemetry and pre-flight instrument characterizations. The qualitative geometrical properties (e.g., the annular structure and radial extent of diffracted light) and radiometric trends were predicted by the model prior to the observations and match without adjustment. We will revise the Results section to explicitly distinguish the independent qualitative validation from the post-adjustment quantitative level and to describe the physical basis and limited range of the tuning. revision: yes
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Referee: [Conclusions] Conclusions (item (a)): The assertion that the analysis 'validate[s] our analytical-numerical model and justify the assumptions' should be qualified. The qualitative confirmation is independent, but the quantitative agreement level depends on parameter adjustment; without an a-priori prediction or cross-validation on held-out data, the strength of validation is primarily qualitative.
Authors: We concur that the strongest validation is qualitative and independent of the data used for comparison. The quantitative agreement of 30-50% is achieved only after parameter adjustment within physically motivated bounds, and we lack an a-priori prediction or held-out cross-validation in this early dataset. We will revise item (a) in the Conclusions to state that the model is validated in its qualitative predictions and that the assumptions are justified by the independent geometrical and radiometric matches, while noting that the quantitative correspondence is obtained after fine-tuning and should be interpreted accordingly. revision: yes
Circularity Check
Quantitative radiometric agreement achieved only after fine-tuning model to the same observations
specific steps
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fitted input called prediction
[Abstract (Results paragraph)]
"After fine-tuning of the model we see quantitative correspondence of the level of 30% -- 50%, depending on the configuration."
The model parameters for geometry, millimetric positioning, and radiometry are adjusted to the ASPIICS observations being analyzed; the resulting 30-50% agreement level is then presented as quantitative validation of the model. This agreement is produced by the fitting step itself rather than serving as an a priori test.
full rationale
The paper's central validation rests on comparing ASPIICS data to a prior analytical-numerical diffraction model, with explicit fine-tuning of geometry, formation-flying positioning, and radiometric parameters to improve the match. Qualitative properties of diffracted light are confirmed independently by the observations, providing external grounding. However, the reported 30-50% quantitative correspondence and the estimate that diffracted light is two orders of magnitude below coronal signal are obtained post-tuning, reducing that portion of the claim to a fitted result rather than an independent prediction. No self-definitional equations, imported uniqueness theorems, or other circular patterns appear in the derivation chain. The tuning step is transparently reported, limiting the circularity to moderate.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- fine-tuning parameters
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The analytical-numerical diffraction model accurately represents light diffraction around the external occulter and the radiometric response of the ASPIICS detector under the formation-flying geometry.
Reference graph
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Zhukov, A. N., Thizy, C., Galano, D., et al. 2025, arXiv e-prints, arXiv:2509.00253 Article number, page 12 S. Shestov et al.: Diffraction in the ASPIICS coronagraph: observations and modeling Appendix A: Details of mathematical approach In our analysis we follow the method of Aime (2013) and Rougeot et al. (2017). Firstly we consider propagation of a wave...
discussion (0)
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