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Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2009

Keck Interferometer Nuller Data Reduction and On-Sky Performance

M. M. Colavita; Eugene Serabyn; R. Millan-Gabet; C. Koresko; R. L. Akeson; Andrew J. Booth; B. Mennesson; S. Ragland; E. Appleby; B. Berkey; Andrew Cooper; S. Crawford; Michelle J. Creech-Eakman; W. Dahl; C. Felizardo; J. I. Garcia-Gathright; J. Gathright; J. Herstein; E. Hovland; M. Hrynevych; E. R. Ligon; Drew Medeiros; James D. Moore; D. Morrison; Dean L. Palmer; T. Panteleeva; B. Smith; Mark R. Swain; Robert F. Smythe; K. Summers

We describe the Keck Interferometer nuller theory of operation, data reduction, and on-sky performance, particularly as it applies to the nuller exozodiacal dust key science program that was carried out between 2008 February and 2009 January. We review the nuller implementation, including the detailed phasor processing involved in implementing the null-peak mode used for science data and the sequencing used for science observing. We then describe the Level 1 reduction to convert the instrument telemetry streams to raw null leakages, and the Level 2 reduction to provide calibrated null leakages. The Level 1 reduction uses conservative, primarily linear processing, implemented consistently for science and calibrator stars. The Level 2 processing is more flexible, and uses diameters for the calibrator stars measured contemporaneously with the interferometer’s K-band cophasing system in order to provide the requisite accuracy. Using the key science data set of 462 total scans, we assess the instrument performance for sensitivity and systematic error. At 2.0 Jy we achieve a photometrically-limited null leakage uncertainty of 0.25% rms per 10 minutes of integration time in our broadband channel. From analysis of the Level 2 reductions, we estimate a systematic noise floor for bright stars of ~0.2% rms null leakage uncertainty per observing cluster in the broadband channel. A similar analysis is performed for the narrowband channels. We also provide additional information needed for science reduction, including details on the instrument beam pattern and the basic astrophysical response of the system, and references to the data reduction and modeling tools.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

ASTRA: astrometry and phase-referencing astronomy on the Keck interferometer

Julien Woillez; R. L. Akeson; M. Mark Colavita; J. A. Eisner; Andrea M. Ghez; James R. Graham; Lynne A. Hillenbrand; R. Millan-Gabet; John D. Monnier; J.-U. Pott; S. Ragland; Peter L. Wizinowich; E. Appleby; B. Berkey; Andrew Cooper; C. Felizardo; J. Herstein; M. Hrynevych; Olivier Martin; Drew Medeiros; D. Morrison; T. Panteleeva; B. Smith; K. Summers; Kevin Tsubota; C. Tyau; E. Wetherell

ASTRA (ASTrometric and phase-Referencing Astronomy) is an upgrade to the existing Keck Interferometer which aims at providing new self-phase referencing (high spectral resolution observation of YSOs), dual-field phase referencing (sensitive AGN observations), and astrometric (known exoplanetary systems characterization and galactic center general relativity in strong field regime) capabilities. With the first high spectral resolution mode now offered to the community, this contribution focuses on the progress of the dual field and astrometric modes.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

Recent progress at the Keck interferometer

S. Ragland; R. L. Akeson; M. Mark Colavita; R. Millan-Gabet; Julien Woillez; Peter L. Wizinowich; E. Appleby; B. Berkey; Andrew Cooper; C. Felizardo; J. Herstein; M. Hrynevych; Drew Medeiros; D. Morrison; T. Panteleeva; J.-U. Pott; B. Smith; K. Summers; Kevin Tsubota; C. Tyau; E. Wetherell

In this paper we report on progress at the Keck Interferometer since the 2004 SPIE meeting with an emphasis on the operations improvements for visibility science.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2013

The Keck Interferometer

M. M. Colavita; Peter L. Wizinowich; R. L. Akeson; S. Ragland; Julien Woillez; R. Millan-Gabet; Eugene Serabyn; M. Abajian; D. S. Acton; E. Appleby; J. Beletic; C. A. Beichman; James Bell; B. Berkey; J. Berlin; Andrew F. Boden; Andrew J. Booth; R. Boutell; Frederic H. Chaffee; D. Chan; Jason C. Y. Chin; J. Chock; Richard Cohen; Andrew Cooper; S. Crawford; Michelle J. Creech-Eakman; W. Dahl; G. Eychaner; James L. Fanson; C. Felizardo

The Keck Interferometer (KI) combined the two 10 m W. M. Keck Observatory telescopes on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, as a long-baseline near- and mid-infrared interferometer. Funded by NASA, it operated from 2001 until 2012. KI used adaptive optics on the two Keck telescopes to correct the individual wavefronts, as well as active fringe tracking in all modes for path-length control, including the implementation of cophasing to provide long coherent integration times. KI implemented high sensitivity fringe-visibility measurements at H (1.6 μm), K (2.2 μm), and L (3.8 μm) bands, and nulling measurements at N band (10 μm), which were used to address a broad range of science topics. Supporting these capabilities was an extensive interferometer infrastructure and unique instrumentation, including some additional functionality added as part of the NSF-funded ASTRA program. This paper provides an overview of the instrument architecture and some of the key design and implementation decisions, as well as a description of all of the key elements and their configuration at the end of the project. The objective is to provide a view of KI as an integrated system, and to provide adequate technical detail to assess the implementation. Included is a discussion of the operational aspects of the system, as well as of the achieved system performance. Finally, details on V^2 calibration in the presence of detector nonlinearities as applied in the data pipeline are provided.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

Keck Interferometer nuller update

M. Mark Colavita; Eugene Serabyn; Andrew J. Booth; S. Crawford; J. I. Garcia-Gathright; E. R. Ligon; B. L. Mennesson; Peter L. Wizinowich; S. Ragland; E. Appleby; B. Berkey; Andrew Cooper; Wayne Dahl; J. Gathright; M. Hrynevych; Drew Medeiros; D. Morrison; T. Panteleeva; B. Smith; K. Summers; Kevin Tsubota; C. Tyau; E. Wetherell; Julien Woillez; R. L. Akeson; R. Millan-Gabet; C. Felizardo; C. Koresko; J. Herstein

The Keck Interferometer combines the two 10 m Keck telescopes as a long baseline interferometer, funded by NASA, as a joint development among the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the W. M. Keck Observatory, and the Michelson Science Center. Since 2004, it has offered an H- and K-band fringe visibility mode through the Keck TAC process. Recently this mode has been upgraded with the addition of a grism for higher spectral resolution. The 10 um nulling mode, for which first nulling data were collected in 2005, completed the bulk of its engineering development in 2007. At the end of 2007, three teams were chosen in response to a nuller key science call to perform a survey of nearby stars for exozodiacal dust. This key science observation program began in Feb. 2008. Under NSF funding, Keck Observatory is leading development of ASTRA, a project to add dual-star capability for high sensitivity observations and dual-star astrometry. We review recent activity at the Keck Interferometer, with an emphasis on the nuller development.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

Visibility science operations with the Keck Interferometer

Peter L. Wizinowich; R. L. Akeson; M. Mark Colavita; J. Gathright; E. Appleby; James Bell; Andrew J. Booth; Wayne Dahl; Patricia Goude; M. Hrynevych; Ian Lynn; R. Millan-Gabet; Christpher R. Neyman; Andy C. Rudeen; Tim Saloga; K. Summers; Kevin Tsubota

The visibility science mode of the Keck Interferometer fully transitioned into operations with the successful completion of its operational readiness review in April 2004. The goal of this paper is to describe this science mode and the operations structure that supports it.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2012

Self-phase-referenced spectro-interferometry on the Keck interferometer

Julien Woillez; R. L. Akeson; M. M. Colavita; J. A. Eisner; R. Millan-Gabet; John D. Monnier; J.-U. Pott; S. Ragland; Peter L. Wizinowich; M. Abajian; E. Appleby; B. Berkey; Andrew Cooper; C. Felizardo; J. Herstein; M. Hrynevych; Drew Medeiros; D. Morrison; T. Panteleeva; B. Smith; K. Summers; Kevin Tsubota; C. Tyau; E. Wetherell

As part of the astrometric and phase-referenced astronomy (ASTRA) project, three new science modes are being developed for the Keck Interferometer that extend the science capabilities of this instrument to include higher spectral resolution, fainter magnitudes, and astrometry. We report on the successful implementation of the first of these science modes, the self-phase-referencing mode, which provides a K-band (λ = 2.2 μm) spectral resolution of R ∼ 1000 on targets as faint as 7.8 mag with spatial resolution as fine as λ/B = 5 mas in the K band, with the 85 m interferometer baseline. This level of spectral resolution would not have been possible without a phase-referencing implementation extending the integration time limit imposed by atmospheric turbulence. For narrow spectral features, we demonstrate a precision of ± 0.01 on the differential V^2(λ), and ± 1.7 mrad on the differential phase Φ(λ), equivalent to a differential astrometry precision of ± 1.45 μas. This new Keck Interferometer instrument is typically used to study the geometry and location of narrow spectral features at high angular resolution, referenced to a continuum. By simultaneously providing spectral and spatial information, the geometry of velocity fields (e.g., rotating disks, inflows, outflows, etc.) larger than 150 km s^(-1) can also be explored.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

Recent progress at the Keck Interferometer: operations and V2 science

S. Ragland; Peter L. Wizinowich; R. L. Akeson; M. Mark Colavita; E. Appleby; B. Berkey; Andrew J. Booth; Andrew Cooper; S. Crawford; Wayne Dahl; C. Felizardo; J. I. Garcia-Gathright; J. Gathright; J. Herstein; M. Hrynevych; C. Koresko; R. Ligon; Drew Medeiros; B. Mennesson; R. Millan-Gabet; D. Morrison; B. Parvin; T. Panteleeva; Eugene Serabyn; B. Smith; K. Summers; Kevin Tsubota; C. Tyau; E. Wetherell; Julien Woillez

The Keck Interferometer combines the two 10m diameter Keck telescopes for near-infrared fringe visibility, and mid-infrared nulling observations. We report on recent progress with an emphasis on new visibility observing capabilities, operations improvements for visibility and nulling, and on recent visibility science. New visibility observing capabilities include a grism spectrometer for higher spectral resolution. Recent improvements include a new AO output dichroic for increased infrared light throughput, and the installation of new wave-front controllers on both Keck telescopes. We also report on recent visibility results in several areas including (1) young stars and their circumstellar disks, (2) pre-main sequence star masses, and (3) Circumstellar environment of evolved stars. Details on nuller instrument and nuller science results, and the ASTRA phase referencing and astrometry upgrade, are presented in more detail elsewhere in this conference.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

The Keck Interferometer Nuller (KIN): configuration, measurement approach, and first results

Eugene Serabyn; E. Appleby; James Bell; Andrew J. Booth; Jason C. Y. Chin; M. Mark Colavita; S. Crawford; Michelle J. Creech-Eakman; Wayne Dahl; James L. Fanson; Jean I. Garcia; J. Gathright; E. Hovland; M. Hrynevych; Chris D. Koresko; R. Ligon; B. Mennesson; James D. Moore; Dean L. Palmer; T. Panteleeva; S. Ragland; Leonard J. Reder; T. Saloga; Robert F. Smythe; C. Tyau; Kevin Tsubota; Gautam Vasisht; E. Wetherell; Peter L. Wizinowich; Julien Woillez

The Keck Interferometer Nuller (KIN) will be used to examine nearby stellar systems for the presence of circumstellar exozodiacal emission. A successful pre-ship review was held for the KIN in June 2004, after which the KIN was shipped to the Keck Observatory. The integration of the KINs many sub-systems on the summit of Mauna Kea, and initial on-sky testing of the system, has occupied the better part of the past year. This paper describes the KIN system-level configuration, from both the hardware and control points of view, as well as the current state of integration of the system and the measurement approach to be used. During the most recent on-sky engineering runs in May and July 2005, all of the sub-systems necessary to measure a narrowband null were installed and operational, and the full nulling measurement cycle was carried out on a star for the first time.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

First faint dual-field phase-referenced observations on the Keck interferometer

Julien Woillez; Peter L. Wizinowich; R. L. Akeson; M. Mark Colavita; J. A. Eisner; R. Millan-Gabet; John D. Monnier; Jorg-Uwe Pott; S. Ragland; E. Appleby; Andrew Cooper; C. Felizardo; Jennifer Herstein; Olivier Martin; Drew Medeiros; D. Morrison; T. Panteleeva; B. Smith; K. Summers; Kevin Tsubota; C. Tyau; Ed Wetherell

Ground-baseed long baselinne interferomeeters have lonng been limiteed in sensitiviity by the shoort integration periods imposed by atmospheric tuurbulence. Thee first observaation fainter thhan this limit wwas performedd on January 222, 2011 when the Keck Interferommeter observedd a K=11.5 taarget, about onne magnitude fainter than iits K=10.3 limmit. This observation wwas made posssible by the Duual Field Phase Referencing instrument of the ASTRA pproject: simultaaneously measuring thhe real-time efffects of the atmmosphere on a nearby bright guide star, andd correcting foor it on the fainnt target, integration tiime longer thaan the turbulennce time scale are made possible. As a preelude to this ddemonstration, we first present the implementatioon of Dual FField Phase RReferencing onn the interferoometer. We tthen detail itss on-sky performance focusing on tthe accuracy oof the turbulennce correction, and on the reesulting fringe contrast stabiility. We conclude witth a presentatioon of early resuults obtained wwith Laser Guidde Star AO andd the interferommeter.

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R. L. Akeson

California Institute of Technology

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R. Millan-Gabet

California Institute of Technology

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C. Felizardo

California Institute of Technology

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Julien Woillez

European Southern Observatory

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