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Telescopes & recent observational techniques ASTR 3010 Lecture 4 Chapters 3 & 6 Telescope mounts Different Designs Newtonian Gregorian Cassegrain Focal Planes • Prime focus = large field of view, least number of optical elements (best imaging quality). • Most radio telescopes Focal Planes • Prime, Newtonian, Cassegrain, Coude, Coude Coudé focus • 1m telescope at Teide Observatory on Canary Island useful to use a large instrument with the telescope Nasmyth foci + Cassegrain focus instrument selector Telescope mirror • Honeycomb design • Zerodur (zero thermal expansion glass) • Silver (99.5%) or aluminum (98.7%) coating Protected silver coating (2004-) • Especially important in mid-IR (emissivity = 1 – reflectivity) Diffraction Diffraction and Airy Pattern 1.22 D :radian :wavelength D:apertture diameter Atmospheric Seeing Astronomical Seeing short exposures Perfect wavefronts Star speckle pattern Distorted wavefronts r0 Trubulent Atmo. long exposures seeing disk • In a short exposure, wavefront distortions caused by variations in refractive index in the atmosphere. Continue • r0 = coherent length typical size of air packet. For a superb seeing: r0~20cm, poor seeing r0~1cm • Seeing disk = averaged speckle patterns over long exposure. • Seeing disk size = Full width half maximum of the long exposure image. Half maximum FWHM Atmospheric Turbulence Fried parameter (r0): size of a typical lump of uniform air in the turbulent atmosphere (meter) 3 2 2 r0 ( ) 0.423 sec( ) Cn (h)dh 0 2 5 6 / 5 Coherent timescale (second) : t0 = timescale of the change of turbulence Seeing (radian) FWHM ( ) 0.98 r0 0.2 Typically: r0=10cm, t0=10msec FWHM=1” in the visible (0.5m) Signature of Atmospheric Turbulence Shorter exposures allow to freeze some atmospheric effects and reveal the spatial structure of the wavefront corrugation Sequential 5sec exposure images in the K band on the ESO 3.6m telescope Shorter exposures than t0 speckle imaging A Speckle structure appears when the exposure is shorter than the atmosphere coherence time t0 1ms exposure at the focus of a 4m diameter telescope Speckle pattern • Very short (< 10 msec) exposures of a star • If you shift these images so that you align the brightest spot always on the same position and add all these shifted images, you can get a greatly improved image which is close to the diffraction limit. This technique is known as “Speckle Interferometry” Speckle imaging Recombine 100s of short exposures to achieve the diffraction limited imaging reconstructed image 400 100ms exposures 40sec single exposure Mirror Seeing When a mirror is warmer that the air in an undisturbed enclosure, a convective equilibrium (full cascade) is reached after 10-15mn. The limit on the convective cell size is set by the mirror diameter 20 Thermal Emission Analysis VLT Unit Telescope *>15.0°C 14.0 12.0 10.0 8.0 UT3 Enclosure • 19 Feb. 1999 • 0h34 Local Time • Wind summit: ENE, 4m/s • Air Temp summit: 13.8C 6.0 4.0 2.0 *<1.8°C 21 Adaptive Optics Adaptive Optics Adaptive Optics observation Conventional AO • AO performance can be measured by Strehl ratio RS IPSF / IAiry IPSF is peak intensity of an actual image, IAiry is the peak intensity of the Airy pattern Perfect AO will have a Strehl ratio of 1.0. • AO corrected field is within an isoplanatic angle from the guide star. • isoplanatic angle is typically 5-6 arcsec at near-IR (~2micron) • Chance of having a suitable guide star (natural guide star) close to your science target is slim. • Artificial guide star created by a laser laser guide star (LGS) AO • Still, AO corrected field is within the radius of an isoplanatic angle from your laser spot. Natural Guide Star (NGS) and Laser Guide Star (LGS) • NGS : using nearby bright stars to your science target • Make an artificial guide star close to your science target Anisoplanitsm and cone effect • Different light paths b/w the reference star and others MCAO & GLAO • Multi-conjugate AO and Ground Layer AO Laser MCAO at Gemini South Single AO versus MCAO • MCAO : Best AO correction over large FOV GLAO : improve image quality over large FOV In summary… Important Concepts Important Terms • Telescope designs and foci • • • • • • • • Atmospheric turbulence and its effects on astronomical observations • Speckle Imaging • Adaptive Optics Seeing Diffraction limit Airy ring/pattern Fried parameter Atmospheric coherence time Anisoplanitism MCAO, GLAO Chapter/sections covered in this lecture : 3 & 6