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Early Science Results and Status of the Gemini Telescopes Prepared by Phil Puxley Barolo, October 2001 Gemini North, Hawaii - 4200 m Beginning of science operations: 2000B Gemini South, Chile - 2900 m Beginning of science operations: 2001B Gemini North: Early science with “visitor” instruments Why? Very late delivery of facility instruments NIRI, GMOS and GNIRS more than 2 yrs late Use of 2 visitor instruments • Get some science out; shake down telescope systems and operational processed…but very labour intensive • The U Hawaii/NSF Adaptive Optics near IR system Hokupa’a/QUIRC • The U Florida/NSF/NASA mid IR imager OSCIR Observing on Gemini North: programs Demonstration Science (2000B) • Galactic Center (Hokupa’a) “Quick Start” service observing (2000B) • Hokupa’a (26 programs) & OSCIR (10 programs) – 53 science + 68 cal CDs Classical observing (2001A) • 41 programs on Hokupa’a and OSCIR (on-going) 13 presentations and posters at AAS #198 Sub-arcsec IR Imaging with Hokupa’a on Gemini North Hokupa’a : 36 actuators AO system Developed and operated by the University of Hawaii Adaptive Optics Group With support from the NSF QUIRC: 1k x 1k HgCdTe device 20’’ x 20’’ field with Gemini/Hokupa’a JHK and narrow-band filters Engineering into science M32 K’-band 20”x20” FWHM= 0.12” Bright * AGB tip K = 15.5 Small H-K color dispersion - Brightest stars well mixed throughout - No evidence for radial age gradient Davidge et al. 2000, ApJ, 545, L89 = FIRST PAPER The Stellar Content of the Central Regions of M33 A.W. Stephens & J.A. Frogel The Ohio State University M33 pc) (80kpc) 20” 30’ (7 M33 Core Optical-IR CMD Luminosity Function First results on center of M33 Complicated CMD Range of stellar ages LF slope steeper than bulge of our Galaxy Disk-like stellar distribution to ~3” No significant radial variations in LF or CMD QSO “absorbing” galaxies Mark Chun, Gemini Observatory Radio loud quasar Q2251+113 with lobes SE-NW V ~ 15.8; DLA at z=0.11 Hokupa’a/QUIRC K-band: 39 min FWHM = 0.17” K(5s ) ~ 22.2 Object to SE K’ ~ 20.5 • K = - 18.0 if at absorber • K = - 20.5 if near QSO Possibly detecting radio lobes in the near IR The Galactic Center with Gemini-Hokupa’a/QUIRC DEMONSTRATION SCIENCE program prior to starting community science obs: [10 half-nights run] Stellar content near SgrA* and Arches Cluster Variability and Extinction maps Creation/enlargement of a GC astrometric database Data product: 3.5 GB reduced and available as 60 images (250 MB) on a CD Eleven 20”x20” fields in H and K’ 6 min (K’) / 12 min (H) to 40 min per field FWHM (H,K) = 0.08” - 0.15” Galactic Center DS: The Team Science definition Vicky Alonso, Cordoba Robert Blum, CTIO Michael Burton, UNSW Simon Casassus, U.Chile Angela Cotera, Steward Tim Davidge, HIA Tom Geballe, Gemini Andrea Ghez, UCLA Fluvio Melia, Steward Dante Minniti, U.Catolica Mark Morris, UCLA A. Quirrenbach, UCSD Doug Simons, Gemini Program Support/DR Tim Davidge, HIA Bob Blum, CTIO Angela Cotera, Steward Obs. Mark Chun, Gemini Coordination F.Rigaut Instrument Specialists Mark Chun, Gemini Joe Jensen, Gemini Wolgang Brandner, UH-IfA Dan Potter, UH-IfA Galactic Center Demo Science Eleven 20’’x20’’ fields Orange symbol is the guide star for Hokupa’a. Field 11 is the Arches Cluster Very high extinction clouds IRS8 (bow shock) Filters: •H •K’ •CO •CO cont. 40” 4’ 5” Bow shock >10 stars per arcsec2 at K~18 >220 stars in 5”x5” UH-88”, Courtesy W.Brandner, 0.65” seeing Gemini N/Hokupa’a-Quirc (U of H/NSF) IRS7 SgrA* Analysis of GC Data Francois Rigaut, Gemini Observatory Gemini images probe the GC luminosity function 2.5 mag deeper than HST/NICMOS Photometric precision of +/-2% is reached “Second Branch” in CO-K’ may correspond to a much younger (few 106 yr) population Concentrated very near the Galactic Center Circumstellar disks: GG Tau Dan Potter, U Hawaii (IfA) Tidally truncated circumbinary disk Keplerian disk extent ~ 180-260 AU resolved imaging polarimetry of system Nature of irregularities? Performance of Hokupa’a on Gemini Hokupa’a performs best with bright guide stars (V<15) and good seeing conditions (d < 0.7”) Delivers image in JHK < 0.1” Complements HST observations Photometry in crowded environments Hokupa’a is a powerful tool to explore the environment of bright objects, close companions, circumstellar disks and to study inner regions of galaxies, QSO host galaxies Mid-IR Imaging with OSCIR On Gemini North Designed and built by Charlie Telesco et al. (U of Florida/NSF and NASA) Mid IR (8-25 mm) imager and low resolution spectrograph 128x128 Si:As IBC detector 11”x11” on Gemini Pixels of 0.089”/pix The Hot Molecular Core in G29.96-0.02 radio continuum (3.5 cm) NH3 (4,4) Crosses: H2O masers 1” May represent intense accretion phase of high-mass star formation Figure from Cesaroni et al. 1998 First Direct Mid-IR Image of a Hot Molecular Core 18.2 mm F(18 mm) = 4.6 Jy De Buizer (CTIO) et al. L 1448 N(AB) Class 0 Protostar (Primary Stellar Accretion Phase) Binary Pair Separated by 7” IRAS IRAS Ciardi et al. (U. Florida) • A emits all mid-IR • Extended structure? • 2-component BB The Jet of M87 at 10 mm Eric Perlman et al. (UMBC) HST/WFPC2 HST/F300W, 0.3 mm M87 Jet OSCIR, 10.8 mm Deepest image ever taken in the mid IR. Sensitivity (1s, 1h): 0.1 mJy on point source; 0.028 mJy/pix Nucleus is point-like (FWHM ~ 0.5 arcsec) Knots A, B, C show structure; fluxes consistent with non-thermal radio emission MIR emission in a Starburst Galaxy SBS 0335-053 S. Plante (U Laval) & Marc Sauvage (CEA) HST/WFPC2 Blue Compact Galaxy with 1/40 O/Hsun (gas) at 54.3 Mpc 6 SSCs (<25 Myr) Exceptionally bright in at 10um But not coinciding with HST knots Gemini OSCIR N band Spectral Energy Distribution of SBS0335-052 Flux (mJy) Q=50.2 mJy ± 30% Output from Dusty N=10.3 mJy ± 50% t = 50 T = 1300 K 30%Sil 40%Grf 30%AmC Wavelength (mm) “Dusty” results on SBS 0335-053 tV ~ 50 mag 21 mag from ISO (Thuan et al. 1999) 0.6 mag from optical spectra (Izotov et al. 1997) Young stellar population >50% of SF undetectable from NIR/visible Amorphous carbon (more than silicates – SN), though no PAH bands detectable from ISO spectrum Standard MRN distribution (53% Silicates, 47% graphite) does not reproduce the SED Performance of OSCIR on Gemini Best achieved point-source sensitivity: 0.1 mJy at 10.8 mm (N band), 1s, 1 hr of chopped integration Best achieved angular resolution: 0.3’’ FWHM at 10.8 mm (N band) approximately diffraction limited OSCIR has contributed fundamentally to engineering of the Gemini Telescopes secondary mirror system Chopping, nodding, fast-guiding and close-loop focus Preparation for T-ReCS facility instrument Status of the Gemini Telescopes and Instruments Call for Proposals for Semester 2002A (1-Feb – 31 July 2002) issued 50% science time on Gemini North, 40% on Gemini South On-going telescope commissioning • Examples: tuning closed loop systems, integrating high-level software, overall systems reliability and maintenance, mirror silver coating Gemini Control Philosophy Control model: “Classical” Open Loop Control Gemini Control Philosophy “P1” S (x, y, z, t) Control model: Full Active Optics Control “P2” Detailed Definition of Observations…high-z SN …Resulting NIRI Data High-z SN (z=1.1) H ~ 23 mag in ~2 hr Status of the Gemini Telescopes and Instruments Call for Proposals for Semester 2002A (1-Feb – 31 July 2002) issued 50% science time on Gemini North, 40% on Gemini South On-going telescope commissioning Status of the Gemini Telescopes and Instruments Call for Proposals for Semester 2002A (1-Feb – 31 July 2002) issued 50% science time on Gemini North, 40% on Gemini South On-going telescope commissioning New and on-going instrument commissioning Gemini North instruments Hokupa’a/QUIRC CIRPASS – near IR IFU NIRI* GMOS* *Facility instruments Gemini South instruments Flamingos – near IR MOS and imager Phoenix – near-IR high res spectroscope Acquisition Camera* – simple optical imager T-ReCS* – mid-IR imager NIRI Status Flexure and other problems caused cancellation of 2001A use ‘Final’ fix to flexure problem to be tested this month Throughputs and sensitivities has been measured for imaging and spectroscopic modes Integration with high-level s/w is underway Observing Tool (OT) for Phase II definition was released in May; 2001B release is due early October Data processing scripts under internal testing Due for release with first SV data NIRI Commissioning Results JHK imaging of starforming region AFGL2591 Images have 0.4” FWHM (closed loop PWFS2) Data obtained with 7580% ‘shutter-open’ efficiency (under high-level s/w control) GMOS Status GMOS delivered to Gemini-N in June First commissioning run was in Aug/Sept Very successful: tested imaging, long-slit, MOS and IFU spectroscopy GMOS Imaging 3 off 2048x6048 CCDs r-band image 60s exp 0.58” FWHM Shadow of OIWFS 5.5 arcmin FOV (Abell 383 cluster at z=0.19) GMOS Multi-Object Spectroscopy Test mask with 20 slits, each 1 arcsec wide 30 x 30min exposures GMOS Multi-Object Spectroscopy Test mask with 20 slits, each 1 arcsec wide 30 x 30min exposures Galaxy with r~21.5 mag at z=0.28 GMOS IFU Spectroscopy 2 integral field units for ‘object’ and ‘sky’ GMOS IFU Spectroscopy Reconstructed image of star as seen by IFU Raw spectra of extended object (M32): 63000+ spectra taken on first commissioning night Commissioning of Gemini South: Near-IR Test Camera (ABU) K-band image of GGD27 star-forming region (20s exp) GMOS multicolour image of NGC628 (0.55 arcsec)