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Instrumentation Concepts Ground-based Optical Telescopes Keith Taylor (IAG/USP) Aug-Nov, 2008 Aug-Nov, 2008 Aug-Sep, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith IAG-USP (Keith Taylor) Taylor) Ground Layer Adaptive Optics (GLAO) Thanks to: Andrei Tokovinin (SOAR) Norbert Hubin (ESO) Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) WHAT IS GROUND LAYER AO? Laser beams Reference Stars High Altitude Layer Altitude Layers Ground Layer Telescope DM conjugated Telescope pupil Ground Layer Aug-Nov, 2008 WFSs IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Real Time Computer Averaged WF.. Does a ground layer exist? PARANAL OBSERVATORY Courtesy: M. Sarazin Ex: 50% of the time there is 55% OR LESS turbulence in the 1st 500m IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Aug-Nov, 2008 More measurements are being carried out (M. Sarazin) Seeing-limited (>90% of Ground-based Astronomy!) Ground Layer Adaptive Optics = Better seeing in wider field Diffraction limit (full AO or MCAO) Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) • Turbulence profile • Guide star(s) • Gain? « Ground Layer » Adaptive Optics [GLAO] GLAO: multi-GS WFS single ground DM correcting average perturbation ~ near ground turbulence Expected performance: FoV single Ground DM GLAO: No Correction: reduced Seeing apparent limit seeing seeing improved and stabilized in very large FoV gain ~2 in 10 arcmin for NIR VLT obs. Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Turbulence Profile and ground layer Mauna Kea, October 22/23, 2002: G-scidar 15km 10km 5km 0km Data: J.Vernin, A.Ziad Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Turbulence Profile and ground CERRO TOLOLO OBSERVATORY layer Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Courtesy: M. Sarazin R. Wilson Turbulence Profile and ground CERRO TOLOLO OBSERVATORY layer Courtesy: M. Sarazin Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Investigation of Ground layer at Paranal Multi Aperture Scintillation Sensor MASS + DIMM: Cn2 profile SLODAR: Slope Detection and ranging: Higher resolution of ground layer Courtesy: R. Wilson Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) GLAO as seeing reducer? Seeing PSF on-axis Improved seeing, Sr(K) ~ 4% PSF off-axis 8’ FOV Reduced confusion in Stellar populations & Cluster fields Seeing reducer Better light concentration Reduced exposure & Telescope time Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Science with GLAO Dynamics of galaxies, AGNs (+IFU) Stellar populations, clusters (confusion!) Supernovae, cepheids Weak lensing ISM (PNe, jets) and more… GLAO benefits most “classical” astronomical programs Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) GLAO as seeing reducer? Seeing K Band, gain: 100% FWHM Y Band, Gain: 30% With AO Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) GLAO improves Ensquared Energy? Pixel: 0.1” With AO K Band, EE doubled Y Band, gain: 50% Seeing Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) GLAO reduces confusion? Yes but more difficult! Seeing K Band, gain: 40% Y Band, Gain: 30% With AO Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) GLAO and full sky coverage? Need Laser artificial stars for WFS tomography because of: Median to bad seeing conditions assumptions Science performed down to short λ Require Natural Guide Star for Tip-tilt correction 1 VIS NGS Tip-tilt limiting magnitude (R-Band) Tip-tilt limiting magnitude (R-Band) Probability for (top to bottom) 1,2,3 TT NGS Probability for (top to bottom) 1,2,3 TT NGS IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Aug-Nov, 2008In 1arcmin annular FOV In 2 arcmin annular FOV GLAO Gain + in the visible!!! MCAO GLAO Resolution (K-band) Field diameter 0.05” 0.2” 1’ 10’ Number of pixels 1.4 Mpix 9 Mpix Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Sky coverage ~100% GLAO in the visible? @750nm; FOV=1’ GLAO Seeing Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Two GLAO systems R-GLAO Rayleigh LGS S-GLAO 5 sodium LGSs Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) MASS/DIMM measures Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Compare S-GLAO with R-GLAO R-GLAO S-GLAO 17% at 8km, 83% at 0.5km Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Further comparison Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Typical night: Jan 11/12, 2003 Seeing ~0.5m ~0.7m Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Typical night: Jan 15/16, 2003 Seeing ~0.5m ~0.7m Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Statistics: FWHM 25% 50% 75% Seeing 0.94 1.11 1.33 0.5m 0.38 0.53 0.71 0.7m 0.22 0.31 0.49 1.0m 0.17 0.22 0.30 (arcsec) Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) SAM = SOAR Adaptive Module Rayleigh LGS 355 nm, 8W, 10km S-H WFS, 9x9 Bimorph DM CCD imager FoV = 3’x3’ Visitor instrument Collimated space Aug-Nov, 2008 PDR: 2004 First light: 2006 (now 9/09) LGS: 2007 (now 9/10) IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Optical design: OAP •All-reflective •Excellent quality •Collimated space Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) SAM as adaptor Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) GLAO: useful for most astronomical programs Ground Layer Adaptive Optics = Seeing reducer Reduced Seeing => reduced exposure & telescope times Reduced seeing => Reduced confusion in Stellar populations & Cluster fields Ground Layer Adaptive Optics = Seeing “stabilizer” Seeing stabilizer => better percentile seeing for your site! Seeing reducer is “easily” achievable at all λs (down to vis.) High Sky coverage GLAO systems will benefit most astronomical programs Seeing reducer = light concentration: Sufficient for distant (“small”) galaxies with low surface brightness (0.2-0.1” pixel enough) Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor) Conclusions GLAO is complementary to AO, MCAO Opens “visible” window, all-sky Rayleigh LGS is quite good SAM _ first implementation, test-bench Need data on turbulence in the first km! Aug-Nov, 2008 IAG/USP (Keith Taylor)