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HIGH ALTITUDE OBSERVATORY NCAR – Boulder, CO The Visible Spectro-Polarimeter (ViSP) A First-Light Instrument for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) Pete Nelson David Elmore (now NSO), Roberto Casini, Steven Tomczyk, Alfred de Wijn, Rebecca Centeno Elliot Greg Card, Rich Summers, Alice Lecinski, Michael Knölker (P.I.) Boulder Solar Days – Friday, March 20th, 2009 Basic ViSP Configuration: HIGH ALTITUDE OBSERVATORY NCAR – Boulder, CO Fold mirrors (3) Scan direction Camera Lenses (3) Entrance Slit (telescope Focus) (2m F.L.) Camera 1 Collimating Lens (moves with Slit) Camera 2 Camera 3 1) Fold beams to get small angles ∆β 2) Beware of “Anamorphic” Magnification: R = R0·cos(α)/cos(β) 3) Mirrors & lenses = flexibility! Boulder Solar Days – Friday, March 20th, 2009 Grating (1 of 3) HIGH ALTITUDE OBSERVATORY NCAR – Boulder, CO ViSP Specifications • • • • • • • Wavelength range: 380-1083**nm, three lines covered simultaneously Spatial resolution: 2x ATST diffraction limit (0.04 arc seconds @ 600nm) Spatial FOV: 2 arc minutes (goal of 2.8) Spectral Resolution: 2.5pm @ 600nm→R=170,000 (goal of 240,000) Polarimetric Capability: 1x10-4 IC sensitivity, 5x10-4 accuracy Temporal Cadence: 1x10-3 Ic polarimetry in 10 seconds @ full spectral/spatial res. Simultaneous operation with: – Near-IR Spectro-Polarimeter (NIRSP) – Visible Tunable Filter (VTF) – Visible Broadband Imager (VBI) Not all specifications can be met simultaneously! Example: (2 arc minutes / 0.04 arc seconds) = ~3,200 slit positions. x 10s integration = 8.8 hours! Boulder Solar Days – Friday, March 20th, 2009 HIGH ALTITUDE OBSERVATORY NCAR – Boulder, CO Diffraction Gratings: Terminology and Conventions Substrate (glass, <λ/10) Echelle Grating (Φ>45˚) The Grating Equation: nλ/d = sin(α) + sin(β) (n = ‘order’ of diffraction) Φ≈80˚ d Φ≈20˚ When α+β = 2·Φ Efficiency is maximized Figure from Gray: “Observation and Analysis Of Stellar Photospheres” Boulder Solar Days – Friday, March 20th, 2009 HIGH ALTITUDE OBSERVATORY NCAR – Boulder, CO The Problem with Spectrographs on Large Telescopes…. Ruling and ‘n’ don’t appear!! 2 x (# arc seconds/radian) RSLIT 412530" sin( ) WGRATING W "SLIT DTEL •Same spectrograph at ATST will have ~6x lower resolution than at the Dunn. •Ex: for R=170,000 @ 600nm with a 30cm grating @ 60˚, W<0.16 arc seconds •Prominence use case @ 1 arc second → R=27,200 ! •Sin(β)→use echelle gratings Boulder Solar Days – Friday, March 20th, 2009 Gratings as Interferometric Filters Boulder Solar Days – Friday, March 20th, 2009 HIGH ALTITUDE OBSERVATORY NCAR – Boulder, CO HIGH ALTITUDE OBSERVATORY NCAR – Boulder, CO Examples of real ViSP configurations: 255 lpmm – photosphere/chromosphere 404 lpmm - Prominence 5876 5173 6302 6563 10830 8542 255 lpmm – photosphere/chromosphere 295 lpmm - Filament 5173 8542 8542 6563 6302 10830 Boulder Solar Days – Friday, March 20th, 2009 Conclusions: HIGH ALTITUDE OBSERVATORY NCAR – Boulder, CO • ViSP will make the highest spatial resolution spectropolarimetric maps ever made of the Sun • Capable of measuring 3 lines simultaneously*** • Meets all requirements defined by the ATST Science Working Group*** • Versatile – optical table layout allows rapid reconfiguration Boulder Solar Days – Friday, March 20th, 2009 ViSP Polarimetry in a Nutshell: HIGH ALTITUDE OBSERVATORY NCAR – Boulder, CO •ViSP will use a rotating waveplate modulator at Gregorian focus •Cameras will take images at 100Hz •Polarizing beam splitters at cameras will be used as analyzers. Both beams will make an image of the spectrum on the camera (dual-beam polarimetry). (100fps) (1600fps) (10 second integration time) Calculation by Phil Judge ViSP will require careful calibration of telescope’s polarizing properties Boulder Solar Days – Friday, March 20th, 2009 A “Casini-Tomczyk” Modulator: A stack of 4 ‘ordinary’ retarders in series Boulder Solar Days – Friday, March 20th, 2009 HIGH ALTITUDE OBSERVATORY NCAR – Boulder, CO