Cyrus Sabet
European Southern Observatory
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Cyrus Sabet.
Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003
Pierre Kervella; Philippe B. Gitton; D. Ségransan; Emmanuel di Folco; P. Kern; M. Kiekebusch; Than Phan Duc; Antonio Longinotti; Vincent Coude du Foresto; Pascal Ballester; Cyrus Sabet; W. D. Cotton; Markus Schoeller; Rainer Wilhelm
Installed at the heart of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI), VINCI combines coherently the infrared light coming from two telescopes. The first fringes were obtained in March 2001 with the VLTI test siderostats, and in October of the same year with the 8 meters Unit Telescopes (UTs). After more than one year of operation, it is now possible to evaluate its behavior and performances with a relatively long timescale. During this period, the technical downtime has been kept to a very low level. The most important parameters of the instrument (interferometric efficiency, mechanical stability,...) have been followed regularly, leading to a good understanding of its performances and characteristics. In addition to a large number of laboratory measurements, more than 3000 on-sky observations have been recorded, giving a precise knowledge of the behavior of the system under various conditions. We report in this paper the main characteristics of the VINCI instrument hardware and software. The differences between observations with the siderostats and the UTs are also briefly discussed.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2004
Andreas Glindemann; Maja Albertsen; Luigi Andolfato; Gerardo Avila; Pascal Ballester; Bertrand Bauvir; Francoise Delplancke; Frederic Derie; Martin Dimmler; Philippe Duhoux; Emmanuel di Folco; R. Frahm; Emmanuel Galliano; Bruno Gilli; Paul Giordano; Philippe B. Gitton; Stephane Guisard; Nico Housen; Christian A. Hummel; Alexis Huxley; Robert Karban; Pierre Kervella; M. Kiekebusch; Bertrand Koehler; Samuel A. Leveque; Tom Licha; Antonio Longinotti; Derek J. McKay; Serge Menardi; Guy J. Monnet
The Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) on Cerro Paranal (2635 m) in Northern Chile reached a major milestone in September 2003 when the mid infrared instrument MIDI was offered for scientific observations to the community. This was only nine months after MIDI had recorded first fringes. In the meantime, the near infrared instrument AMBER saw first fringes in March 2004, and it is planned to offer AMBER in September 2004. The large number of subsystems that have been installed in the last two years - amongst them adaptive optics for the 8-m Unit Telescopes (UT), the first 1.8-m Auxiliary Telescope (AT), the fringe tracker FINITO and three more Delay Lines for a total of six, only to name the major ones - will be described in this article. We will also discuss the next steps of the VLTI mainly concerned with the dual feed system PRIMA and we will give an outlook to possible future extensions.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2006
Pascal Ballester; Klaus Banse; S. Castro; Reinhard W. Hanuschik; Richard N. Hook; Carlo Izzo; Yves Jung; Andreas Kaufer; J. M. Larsen; Tom Licha; H. Lorch; Lars Lundin; Andrea Modigliani; Ralf Palsa; Michele Peron; Cyrus Sabet; Jakob Vinther
With the completion of the first generation instrumentation set on the Very Large Telescope, a total of eleven instruments are now provided at the VLT/VLTI for science operations. For each of them, ESO provides automatic data reduction facilities in the form of instrument pipelines developed in collaboration with the instrument consortia. The pipelines are deployed in different environments, at the observatory and at the ESO headquarters, for on-line assessment of observations, instruments and detector monitoring, as well as data quality control and products generation. A number of VLT pipelines are also distributed to the user community together with front-end applications for batch and interactive usage. The main application of the pipeline is to support the Quality Control process. However, ESO also aims to deliver pipelines that can generate science ready products for a major fraction of the scientific needs of the users. This paper provides an overview of the current developments for the VLT/VLTI next generation of instruments and of the prototyping studies of new tools for science users.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2004
Derek J. McKay; Pascal Ballester; Klaus Banse; Carlo Izzo; Yves Jung; Michael Kiesgen; Nick Kornweibel; Lars Lundin; Andrea Modigliani; Ralf Palsa; Cyrus Sabet
The European Southern Observatory (ESO) develops and maintains a large number of instrument-specific data processing pipelines. These pipelines must produce standard-format output and meet the need for data archiving and the computation and logging of quality assurance parameters. As the number, complexity and data-output-rate of instrument increases, so does the challenge to develop and maintain the associated processing software. ESO has developed the Common Pipeline Library (CPL) in order to unify the pipeline production effort and to minimise code duplication. The CPL is a self-contained ISO-C library, designed for use in a C/C++ environment. It is designed to work with FITS data, extensions and meta-data, and provides a template for standard algorithms, thus unifying the look-and-feel of pipelines. It has been written in such a way to make it extremely robust, fast and generic, in order to cope with the operation-critical online data reduction requirements of modern observatories. The CPL has now been successfully incorporated into several new and existing instrument systems. In order to achieve such success, it is essential to go beyond simply making the code publicly available, but also engage in training, support and promotion. There must be a commitment to maintenance, development, standards-compliance, optimisation, consistency and testing. This paper describes in detail the experiences of the CPL in all these areas. It covers the general principles applicable to any such software project and the specific challenges and solutions, that make the CPL unique.
Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2002
Pascal Ballester; Alberto Maurizio Chavan; Andreas Glindemann; Carlos Guirao; W. Jaffe; Pierre Kervella; Michele Peron; B. Pirenne; Peter J. Quinn; A. Richichi; Cyrus Sabet; M. Schöller; Andreas J. Wicenec; Rainer Wilhelm; Bruce Wiseman; Markus Wittkowski; Stefano Zampieri
In this article we present the Data Flow System (DFS) for the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI). The Data Flow System is the VLT end-to-end software system for handling astronomical observations from the initial observation proposal phase through the acquisition, processing and control of the astronomical data. The Data Flow system is now in the process of installation and adaptation for the VLT Interferometer. The DFS was first installed for VLTI first fringes utilising the siderostats together with the VINCI instrument and is constantly being upgraded in phase with the VLTI commissioning. When completed the VLT Interferometer will make it possible to coherently combine up to three beams coming from the four VLT 8.2m telescopes as well as from a set of initially three 1.8m Auxiliary Telescopes, using a Delay Line tunnel and four interferometry instruments. Observations of objects with some scientific interest are already being carried out in the framework of the VLTI commissioning using siderostats and the VLT Unit Telescopes, making it possible to test tools under realistic conditions. These tools comprise observation preparation, pipeline processing and further analysis systems. Work is in progress for the commissioning of other VLTI science instruments such as MIDI and AMBER. These are planned for the second half of 2002 and first half of 2003 respectively. The DFS will be especially useful for service observing. This is expected to be an important mode of observation for the VLTI, which is required to cope with numerous observation constraints and the need for observations spread over extended periods of time.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2004
Isabelle Percheron; Pascal Ballester; Cyrus Sabet; Markus Wittkowski; S. Morel; A. Richichi
The ESO Data Flow Operations group (also called Quality Control group) is dedicated to look into the performance of the different VLT instruments, to verify the quality of the calibration and scientific data, to control and monitor them on different time scales. At ESO headquarters in Garching, Germany, one QC scientist is dedicated to these tasks for the VLTI instruments: VINCI, MIDI, AMBER, and (eventually) PRIMA. In this paper, we focus on MIDI. In this presentation, we define the tasks of the Quality Control scientist and describe the lessons learned on quality control and instrument trending with the commissioning instrument VINCI. We then illustrate the different aspects of the MIDI Data Flow Operations supported by the QC scientist such as data management issues (data volume, distribution to the community), processing of the data, and data quality control.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2004
Pascal Ballester; Tom Licha; Derek J. McKay; Isabelle Percheron; Michele Peron; A. Richichi; Cyrus Sabet; Markus Wittkowski
Science interferometry instruments are now available at the Very Large Telescope for observations in service mode; the MID-Infrared interferometry instrument, MIDI, started commissioning and has been opened to observations in 2003 and the AMBER 3-beam instrument shall follow in 2004. The Data Flow System is the VLT end-to-end software system for handling astronomical observations from the initial observation proposal phase through to the acquisition, archiving, processing, and control of the astronomical data. In this paper we present the interferometry specific components of the Data Flow System and the software tools which are used for the VLTI.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2004
S. Morel; Pascal Ballester; Bertrand Bauvir; Peter Biereichel; Jean-Gabriel Cuby; Emmanuel Galliano; Nicholas Haddad; Nico Housen; Christian A. Hummel; Andreas Kaufer; Pierre Kervella; Isabelle Percheron; Florence Puech; Fredrik T. Rantakyrö; A. Richichi; Cyrus Sabet; Markus Schoeller; Jason Spyromilio; Martin Vannier; Anders Wallander; Markus Wittkowski; Christoph Leinert; U. Graser; U. Neumann; W. Jaffe; Jeroen A. de Jong
Storage and Retrieval for Image and Video Databases | 2004
Pascal Ballester; Tom Licha; Derek J. McKay; Isabelle Percheron; Michele Peron; Andrea Richichi; Cyrus Sabet; Markus Wittkowski
Archive | 2004
Klaus Banse; Pascal Ballester; Carlo Izzo; Yves Jung; Lars Lundin; Andrea Modigliani; Ralf Palsa; Derek J. McKay; Michael Kiesgen; Michael Bailey Assoc; Cyrus Sabet