Christopher H. Betters
University of Sydney
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Featured researches published by Christopher H. Betters.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012
Nick Cvetojevic; Nemanja Jovanovic; Christopher H. Betters; Jon Lawrence; Simon C. Ellis; Gordon Robertson; Joss Bland-Hawthorn
Photonic technologies have received growing consideration for incorporation into next-generation astronomical instrumentation, owing to their miniature footprint and inherent robustness. In this paper we present results from the first on-telescope demonstration of a miniature photonic spectrograph for astronomy, by obtaining spectra spanning the entire H-band from several stellar targets. The prototype was tested on the 3.9 m Anglo-Australian telescope. In particular, we present a spectrum of the variable star 1 Gru, with observed CO molecular absorption bands, at a resolving power R = 2500 at 1600 nm. Furthermore, we successfully demonstrate the simultaneous acquisition of multiple spectra with a single spectrograph chip by using multiple fibre inputs.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
Janez Kos; Jane Lin; Tomaž Zwitter; Maruška Žerjal; Sanjib Sharma; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Martin Asplund; Andrew R. Casey; Gayandhi De Silva; Kenneth C. Freeman; Sarah L. Martell; Jeffrey D. Simpson; Katharine J. Schlesinger; Daniel B. Zucker; Borja Anguiano; Carlos Bacigalupo; Timothy R. Bedding; Christopher H. Betters; Gary S. Da Costa; Ly Duong; E. A. Hyde; Michael J. Ireland; Prajwal R. Kafle; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Geraint F. Lewis; Ulisse Munari; David M. Nataf; D. Stello; C. G. Tinney; Gregor Traven
We present the data reduction procedures being used by the GALactic Archeology with Hermes (GALAH) survey, carried out with the HERMES fibre-fed, multi-object spectrograph on the 3.9-m Anglo-Australian Telescope. GALAH is a unique survey, targeting 1 million stars brighter than magnitude V = 14 at a resolution of 28 000 with a goal to measure the abundances of 29 elements. Such a large number of high-resolution spectra necessitate the development of a reduction pipeline optimized for speed, accuracy, and consistency.We outline the design and structure of the IRAF-based reduction pipeline that we developed, specifically for GALAH, to produce fully calibrated spectra aimed for subsequent stellar atmospheric parameter estimation. The pipeline takes advantage of existing IRAF routines and other readily available software so as to be simple to maintain, testable, and reliable. A radial velocity and stellar atmospheric parameter estimator code is also presented, which is used for further data analysis and yields a useful verification of the reduction quality. We have used this estimator to quantify the data quality of GALAH for fibre cross-talk level (≲0.5 per cent) and scattered light (~5 counts in a typical 20 min exposure), resolution across the field, sky spectrum properties, wavelength solution reliability (better than 1 kms-1 accuracy), and radial velocity precision. (Less)
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Christopher H. Betters; Joss Bland-Hawthorn
We present a proof of concept compact diffraction limited high-resolution fiber-fed spectrograph by using a 2D multicore array input. This high resolution spectrograph is fed by a 2D pseudo-slit, the Photonic TIGER, a hexagonal array of near-diffraction limited single-mode cores. We study the feasibility of this new platform related to the core array separation and rotation with respect to the dispersion axis. A 7 core compact Photonic TIGER fiber-fed spectrograph with a resolving power of around R~31000 and 8 nm bandwidth in the IR centered on 1550 nm is demonstrated. We also describe possible architectures based on this concept for building small scale compact diffraction limited Integral Field Spectrographs (IFS).
Optics Express | 2017
Nemanja Jovanovic; N. Cvetojevic; Barnaby Norris; Christopher H. Betters; Christian Schwab; Julien Lozi; Olivier Guyon; Simon Gross; Frantz Martinache; Peter G. Tuthill; D. Doughty; Y. Minowa; Naruhisa Takato; Jon Lawrence
We demonstrate for the first time an efficient, photonic-based astronomical spectrograph on the 8-m Subaru Telescope. An extreme adaptive optics system is combined with pupil apodiziation optics to efficiently inject light directly into a single-mode fiber, which feeds a compact cross-dispersed spectrograph based on array waveguide grating technology. The instrument currently offers a throughput of 5% from sky-to-detector which we outline could easily be upgraded to ∼ 13% (assuming a coupling efficiency of 50%). The isolated spectrograph throughput from the single-mode fiber to detector was 42% at 1550 nm. The coupling efficiency into the single-mode fiber was limited by the achievable Strehl ratio on a given night. A coupling efficiency of 47% has been achieved with ∼ 60% Strehl ratio on-sky to date. Improvements to the adaptive optics system will enable 90% Strehl ratio and a coupling of up to 67% eventually. This work demonstrates that the unique combination of advanced technologies enables the realization of a compact and highly efficient spectrograph, setting a precedent for future instrument design on very-large and extremely-large telescopes.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Nemanja Jovanovic; Nick Cvetojevic; Christian Schwab; Barnaby Norris; Julien Lozi; Simon Gross; Christopher H. Betters; Garima Singh; Olivier Guyon; Frantz Martinache; D. Doughty; Peter G. Tuthill
High-order wavefront correction is not only beneficial for high-contrast imaging, but also spectroscopy. The size of a spectrograph can be decoupled from the size of the telescope aperture by moving to the diffraction limit which has strong implications for ELT based instrument design. Here we present the construction and characterization of an extremely efficient single-mode fiber feed behind an extreme adaptive optics system (SCExAO). We show that this feed can indeed be utilized to great success by photonic-based spectrographs. We present metrics to quantify the system performance and some preliminary spectra delivered by the compact spectrograph.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Christopher H. Betters; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Gordon Robertson
PIMMS IR is a prototype high resolution diraction limited spectrograph operating in the near infrared. Its current conguration has a bandwidth of 8nm centred on 1550nm with a resolving power, λ/Δλ, of 31000 with the option to increase this to ~60000 using a dual grating system. Remarkably, this is 85% of the theoretical limit for Gaussian illumination of a diraction grating. It is based upon the PIMMS#0 (photonic integrated multi-mode micro-spectrograph), a design that utilises the multi-mode to single-mode conversion of the photonic lantern. By feeding the spectrograph with the single-mode bres we are able to design and build a spectrograph whose performance is diraction limited and independent of the input source (i.e. a telescope) it is attached to. The spectrograph has with a throughput of ~70% (that is the light from the single-mode entrance slit that lands on the detector). The spectrograph is also extremely compact with a footprint of just 450mm x 190mm. Here we present the design of PIMMS IR and its performance characteristics determined from ray tracing, physical optics simulations and experimental measurements.Δ
Optics Express | 2017
Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Janez Kos; Christopher H. Betters; Gayandhi De Silva; John O’Byrne; Rob Patterson; Sergio G. Leon-Saval
We demonstrate a new approach to calibrating the spectral-spatial response of a wide-field spectrograph using a fibre etalon comb. Conventional wide-field instruments employed on front-line telescopes are mapped with a grid of diffraction-limited holes cut into a focal plane mask. The aberrated grid pattern in the image plane typically reveals n-symmetric (e.g. pincushion) distortion patterns over the field arising from the optical train. This approach is impractical in the presence of a dispersing element because the diffraction-limited spots in the focal plane are imaged as an array of overlapping spectra. Instead, we propose a compact solution that builds on recent developments in fibre-based, Fabry-Perot etalons. We introduce a novel approach to near-field illumination that exploits a 20cm aperture commercial telescope and the propagation of skew rays in a multimode fibre. The mapping of the optical transfer function across the full field is represented accurately (<0.5% rms residual) by an orthonormal set of Chebyshev moments. Thus we are able to reconstruct the full 4K × 4K CCD image of the dispersed output from the optical fibres using this mapping, as we demonstrate. Our method targets one of the largest sources of systematic error in multi-object spectroscopy, i.e. spectral distortion due to instrumental aberrations, and provides a comprehensive solution to their calibration and removal.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
L. M. R. Fogarty; Z Size; Jiro Funamoto; Iver H. Cairns; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Xiaofeng Wu; Christopher H. Betters; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Anthony Monger
The i-INSPIRE satellite is the result of a collaborative project at the University of Sydney, across the science and engineering faculties. The satellite is a compact tube-shaped pico-satellite with a mass of less than 0.75 kg. i-INSPIRE carries three science instruments - a photonic spectrograph, a radiation counter and an imaging camera, and will be launched to a 310km polar orbit in late 2012 or early 2013. Here we describe the satellite and its subsystems (including the science instruments and the communication system) as well as the ground station, pre-launch tests, and the proposed launch itself. i-INSPIRE will be Australias first fully university operated pico-satellite.
Optics Express | 2017
Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Christopher H. Betters; Joel R. Salazar-Gil; Seong-sik Min; Itandehui Gris-Sánchez; T. A. Birks; Jon Lawrence; Roger Haynes; Dionne M. Haynes; Martin M. Roth; Sylvain Veilleux; Joss Bland-Hawthorn
Photonic lanterns typically allow for single-mode action in a multimode fibre. Since their invention over a decade ago for applications in astrophotonics, they have found important uses in diverse fields of applied science. To date, large aperture highly-mulitmoded to single-mode lanterns have been difficult as fabrication techniques are not practical for mass replication. Here as a proof of concept, we demonstrate three different devices based on multicore fibre photonic lanterns with: 100µm core diameters; NAs = 0.16 and 0.15; and requiring 259 single-mode core system, specifically 7 multicore fibres each with 37 cores, instead of 259 individual single-mode fibres. The average insertion loss excluding coupling efficiencies is only 0.4dB (>91% transmission). This concept has numerous advantages, in particular, (i) it is a direct scaleable solution, (ii) eases imprinting of photonic functions, e.g. fibre Bragg gratings; and (iii) new approach for large-area optical fibre slicers for future large-aperture telescopes.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Christopher H. Betters; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Samuel Richards; T. A. Birks; Itandehui Gris-Sánchez
PIMMS échelle is an extension of previous PIMMS (photonic integrated multimode spectrograph) designs, enhanced by using an échelle diffraction grating as the primary dispersing element for increased spectral band- width. The spectrograph operates at visible wavelengths (550 to 780nm), and is capable of capturing ~100 nm of R > 60, 000 (λ/(triangle)λ) spectra in a single exposure. PIMMS échelle uses a photonic lantern to convert an arbitrary (e.g. incoherent) input beam into N diffraction-limited outputs (i.e. N single-mode fibres). This allows a truly diffraction limited spectral resolution, while also decoupling the spectrograph design from the input source. Here both the photonic lantern and the spectrograph slit are formed using a single length of multi-core fibre. A 1x19 (1 multi-mode fiber to 19 single-mode fibres) photonic lantern is formed by tapering one end of the multi-core fibre, while the other end is used to form a TIGER mode slit (i.e. for a hexagonal grid with sufficient spacing and the correct orientations, the cores of the multi-core fibre can be dispersed such that they do not overlap without additional reformatting). The result is an exceptionally compact, shoebox sized, spectrograph that is constructed primarily from commercial off the shelf components. Here we present a brief overview of the échelle spectrograph design, followed by results from on-sky testing of the breadboard mounted version of the spectrograph at the ‘UK Schmidt Telescope’.