MATISSE is the mid-infrared spectrograph and imager for the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) at Paranal. This second generation interferometry instrument will open new avenues in the exploration of our Universe. Mid-infrared interferometry with MATISSE will allow significant advances in various fundamental research fields: studies of disks around young stellar objects where planets form and evolve, surface structures and mass loss of stars in late evolutionary stages, and the environments of black holes in active galactic nuclei. MATISSE is a unique instrument. As a first breakthrough it will enlarge the spectral domain used by optical interferometry by offering the L & M bands in addition to the N band, opening a wide wavelength domain, ranging from 2.8 to 13 μm on angular scales of 3 mas (L/M band) / 10 mas (N band). As a second breakthrough, it will allow mid-infrared imaging – closure-phase aperture-synthesis imaging – with up to four Unit Telescopes (UT) or Auxiliary Telescopes (AT) of the VLTI. MATISSE will offer various ranges of spectral resolution between R~30 to ~5000. In this article, we present some of the main science objectives that have driven the instrument design. We introduce the physical concept of MATISSE including a description of the signal on the detectors and an evaluation of the expected performance and discuss the project status. The operations concept will be detailed in a more specific future article, illustrating the observing templates operating the instrument, the data reduction and analysis, and the image reconstruction software.
ZIMPOL is the high contrast imaging polarimeter subsystem of the ESO SPHERE instrument. ZIMPOL is dedicated to
detect the very faint reflected and hence polarized visible light from extrasolar planets. ZIMPOL is located behind an
extreme AO system (SAXO) and a stellar coronagraph. SPHERE is foreseen to have first light at the VLT early 2013.
ZIMPOL is currently integrated in the SPHERE system and in testing phase.
We describe the alignment strategy and the results of the ZIMPOL system and the related alignment of ZIMPOL into
SPHERE by the aid of an alignment unit. The field selecting tip/tilt mirror alignment and it’s requirement for
perpendicularity to the two detectors is described. The test setup of the polarimetric components is described.
SPHERE is an instrument designed and built by a consortium consisting of IPAG, MPIA, LAM, LESIA, Fizeau, INAF,
Observatoire de Genève, ETH, NOVA, ONERA and ASTRON in collaboration with ESO.
MATISSE is a mid-infrared spectro-interferometer combining the beams of up to four Unit Telescopes or Auxiliary
Telescopes of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) of the European Southern Observatory.
MATISSE will constitute an evolution of the two-beam interferometric instrument MIDI. New characteristics present in
MATISSE will give access to the mapping and the distribution of the material, the gas and essentially the dust, in the
circumstellar environments by using the mid-infrared band coverage extended to L, M and N spectral bands. The four
beam combination of MATISSE provides an efficient uv-coverage: 6 visibility points are measured in one set and 4
closure phase relations which can provide aperture synthesis images in the mid-infrared spectral regime.
We give an overview of the instrument including the expected performances and a view of the Science Case. We present
how the instrument would be operated. The project involves the collaborations of several agencies and institutes: the
Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur of Nice and the INSU-CNRS in Paris, the Max Planck Institut für Astronomie of
Heidelberg; the University of Leiden and the NOVA-ASTRON Institute of Dwingeloo, the Max Planck Institut für
Radioastronomie of Bonn, the Institut für Theoretische Physik und Astrophysik of Kiel, the Vienna University and the
Konkoly Observatory.
MATISSE is a mid-infrared spectro-interferometer combining beams of up to four telescopes of the ESO VLTI providing phase closure and image reconstruction using interferometric spectra in the LM and N band. This paper presents the opto-mechanical design of the two cold benches containing several types of cryogenic mechanisms (shutter,
Tip/Tilt) used for cryogenic alignment. Key aspects are detailed such as the highly integrated opto-mechanical approach
of the design in order to guarantee component stability and accuracy specifications in the order of nanometers and arcseconds.
EPOL is the imaging polarimeter part of EPICS (Exoplanet Imaging Camera and Spectrograph) for the 42-m E-ELT. It
is based on sensitive imaging polarimetry to differentiate between linearly polarized light from exoplanets and
unpolarized, scattered starlight and to characterize properties of exoplanet atmospheres and surfaces that cannot be
determined from intensity observations alone. EPOL consists of a coronagraph and a dual-beam polarimeter with a
liquid-crystal retarder to exchange the polarization of the two beams. The polarimetry thereby increases the contrast
between star and exoplanet by 3 to 5 orders of magnitude over what the extreme adaptive optics and the EPOL
coronagraph alone can achieve. EPOL operates between 600 and 900 nm, can select more specific wavelength bands
with filters and aims at having an integral field unit to obtain linearly polarized spectra of known exoplanets. We present
the conceptual design of EPOL along with an analysis of its performance.
ZIMPOL is the high contrast imaging polarimeter subsystem of the ESO SPHERE instrument. ZIMPOL is dedicated to
detect the very faint reflected and hence polarized visible light from extrasolar planets. ZIMPOL is located behind an
extreme AO system (SAXO) and a stellar coronagraph. SPHERE is foreseen to have first light at the VLT at the end of
2011. ZIMPOL is currently in the manufacturing, integration and testing phase. We describe the optical, polarimetric,
mechanical, thermal and electronic design as well as the design trade offs. Specifically emphasized is the optical quality
of the key performance component: the Ferro-electric Liquid Crystal polarization modulator (FLC). Furthermore, we
describe the ZIMPOL test setup and the first test results on the achieved polarimetric sensitivity and accuracy. These
results will give first indications for the expected overall high contrast system performance. SPHERE is an instrument
designed and built by a consortium consisting of LAOG, MPIA, LAM, LESIA, Fizeau, INAF, Observatoire de Genève,
ETH, NOVA, ONERA and ASTRON in collaboration with ESO.
MATISSE is foreseen as a mid-infrared spectro-interferometer combining the beams of up to four UTs/ATs of the Very
Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) of the European Southern Observatory. The related science case study
demonstrates the enormous capability of a new generation mid-infrared beam combiner.
MATISSE will constitute an evolution of the two-beam interferometric instrument MIDI. MIDI is a very successful
instrument which offers a perfect combination of spectral and angular resolution. New characteristics present in
MATISSE will give access to the mapping and the distribution of the material (typically dust) in the circumstellar
environments by using a wide mid-infrared band coverage extended to L, M and N spectral bands. The four beam
combination of MATISSE provides an efficient UV-coverage : 6 visibility points are measured in one set and 4 closure
phase relations which can provide aperture synthesis images in the mid-infrared spectral regime.
The ESO planet finder instrument SPHERE will search for the polarimetric signature of the reflected light from
extrasolar planets, using a VLT telescope, an extreme AO system (SAXO), a stellar coronagraph, and an imaging
polarimeter (ZIMPOL). We present the design concept of the ZIMPOL instrument, a single-beam polarimeter
that achieves very high polarimetric accuracy using fast polarization modulation and demodulating CCD detectors.
Furthermore, we describe comprehensive performance simulations made with the CAOS problem-solving
environment. We conclude that direct detection of Jupiter-sized planets in close orbit around the brightest nearby
stars is achievable with imaging polarimetry, signal-switching calibration, and angular differential imaging.
Direct detection and spectral characterization of extra-solar planets is one of the most exciting but also one of the most
challenging areas in modern astronomy. The challenge consists in the very large contrast between the host star and the
planet, larger than 12.5 magnitudes at very small angular separations, typically inside the seeing halo. The whole design
of a "Planet Finder" instrument is therefore optimized towards reaching the highest contrast in a limited field of view and
at short distances from the central star. Both evolved and young planetary systems can be detected, respectively through
their reflected light and through the intrinsic planet emission. We present the science objectives, conceptual design and
expected performance of the SPHERE instrument.
X-shooter, the first 2nd generation VLT instrument, is a new high-efficiency echelle spectrograph. X-shooter operates at the Cassegrain focus and covers an exceptionally wide spectral range from 300 to 2500 nm in a single exposure, with an intermediate spectral resolving power R~5000. The instrument consists of a central structure and three prism cross-dispersed echelle spectrographs optimized for the UV-blue, visible and near-IR wavelength ranges. The design of the near-IR arm of the X-shooter instrument employs advanced design methods and manufacturing techniques. Integrated system design is done at cryogenic working temperatures, aiming for an almost alignment-free integration. ASTRON Extreme Light Weighting is used for high stiffness at low mass. Bare aluminium is post-polished to optical quality mirrors, preserving high shape accuracy at cryogenic conditions. Cryogenic optical mounts compensate for CTE differences of various materials, while ensuring high thermal contact. This paper addresses the general design and the application of these specialized techniques.
The overall optical design of X-Shooter, the second generation, wide band, intermediate resolution, high efficiency, three-arms spectrograph for the VLT, is presented. We focus on the optical design of the three optimized arms, covering UVB (300-550 nm), VIS (550-1000 nm), and NIR (1000-2300 nm) wavelength ranges, including spectrographs and pre-slit optics. All spectrographs share the same original "4C" concept (Collimator Correction of Camera Chromatism). We describe also the auxiliary optics, such as dichroics, acquisition and guiding unit. Performances analysis are summarized.
X-shooter is a single target spectrograph for the Cassegrain focus of one of the VLT UTs. It covers in a single exposure the spectral range from the UV to the H band with a possible extension into part of the K band. It is designed to maximize the sensitivity in this spectral range through the splitting in three arms with optimized optics, coatings, dispersive elements and detectors. It operates at intermediate resolutions (R=4000-14000, depending on wavelength and slit width) sufficient to address quantitatively a vast number of astrophysical applications while working in a background-limited S/N regime in the regions of the spectrum free from strong atmospheric emission and absorption lines. The small number of moving functions (and therefore instrument modes) and fixed spectral format make it easy to operate and permit a fast response. A mini-IFU unit (1.8" x 4") can be inserted in the telescope focal plane and is reformatted in a slit of 0.6"x 12" .The instrument includes atmospheric dispersion correctors in the UV and visual arms. The project foresees the development of a fully automatic data reduction package. The name of the instrument has been inspired by its capability to observe in a single shot a source of unknown flux distribution and redshift. The instrument is being built by a Consortium of Institutes from Denmark, France, Italy and the Netherlands in collaboration with ESO. When it operation, its observing capability will be unique at very large telescopes.
Use of fractional moments of low order is here proposed for processing data of intensity fluctuations from optical atmospheric propagation measurements. In this paper we check the accuracy of low order moment estimation and their ability to discriminate which one, among a number of candidate theoretical distributions, better represents the experimental histograms of intensity. The comparison method is tested by sampling sets of data from three popular distributions, that is Ln, LnME and K distribution. Applications to experimental sets of data are also presented.
Non-stationarity of atmospheric turbulence gives rise to some practical problems when one wants to determine the probability density function (PDF) of intensity fluctuations from laser atmospheric propagation experimental data. For strong fluctuations, the number of uncorrelated data that can be collected in stationary conditions is generally not enough to correctly evaluate intensity moments of order greater than two 1} . In the case of very strong fluctuations even the second order moment (and also variance) can not be estimated with accuracy [2] This is due to the fact that the stronger the fluctuations the longer is the tail of the distribution, which represents the main contribution in high order moment evaluation. If only integer moments are considered, information about intensity PDF that can be extracted from its moments is thus very poor because only a few of them are correctly estimated
In atmospheric and astronomical optics, as well as in applications involving optical propagation through the atmosphere, atmospheric turbulence plays an important role in deterioration of information. Recently, adaptive systems allow correction of aberrations produced by turbulence. In all cases knowledge is necessary of atmospheric turbulence and its characteristic parameters, i.e. inner scale, outer scale and the so called structure constant.
Intensity moments of any order are proposed and moments of low order (less than 2) are shown to be suitable for overcoming the problem of lack of data, due to turbulence non-stationarity, for correctly measuring higher order integer moments in atmospheric optical scintillation.
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