Gianluca Li Causi
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arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
R. U. Claudi; Matteo Aliverti; Federico Biondi; Matteo Munari; Ricardo Zánmar Sánchez; Sergio Campana; Pietro Schipani; Andrea Baruffolo; Sagi Ben-Ami; Anna Brucalassi; Giulio Capasso; Rosario Cosentino; Francesco D'Alessio; Paolo D'Avanzo; Oz Diner; Hanindyo Kuncarayakti; Adam Rubin; Salvatore Scuderi; Fabrizio Vitali; Jani Achrén; José Antonio Araiza-Durán; Iair Arcavi; Andrea Bianco; E. Cappellaro; Mirko Colapietro; Massimo Della Valle; Sergio D'Orsi; D. Fantinel; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; Avishay Gal-Yam
Son of X-Shooter (SOXS) will be a high-efficiency spectrograph with a mean Resolution-Slit product of 4500 (goal 5000) over the entire band capable of simultaneously observing the complete spectral range 350-2000 nm. It consists of three scientific arms (the UV-VIS Spectrograph, the NIR Spectrograph and the Acquisition Camera) connected by the Common Path system to the NTT and the Calibration Unit. The Common Path is the backbone of the instrument and the interface to the NTT Nasmyth focus flange. The light coming from the focus of the telescope is split by the common path optics into the two different optical paths in order to feed the two spectrographs and the acquisition camera. The instrument project went through the Preliminary Design Review in 2017 and is currently in Final Design Phase (with FDR in July 2018). This paper outlines the status of the Common Path system and is accompanied by a series of contributions describing the SOXS design and properties after the instrument Preliminary Design Review.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2006
Jacopo Farinato; Roberto Ragazzoni; Carmelo Arcidiacono; Gentile Giorgia; Emiliano Diolaiti; Italo Foppiani; Matteo Lombini; Laura Schreiber; D. Lorenzetti; Francesco D'Alessio; Gianluca Li Causi; Fernando Pedichini; Fabrizio Vitali; T. M. Herbst; M. Kürster; Peter Bizenberger; Florian Briegel; Fulvio De Bonis; Sebastian Egner; Wolfgang Gässler; Lars Mohr; Alexei Pavlov; R.-R. Rohloff; Roberto Soci
LINC-NIRVANA is an infrared camera that will work in Fizeau interferometric way at the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). The two beams that will be combined in the camera are corrected by an MCAO system, aiming to cancel the turbulence in a scientific field of view of 2 arcminutes. The MCAO wavefront sensors will be two for each arm, with the task to sense the atmosphere at two different altitudes (the ground one and a second height variable between a few kilometers and a maximum of 15 kilometers). The first wavefront sensor, namely the Ground layer Wavefront sensor (GWS), will drive the secondary adaptive mirror of LBT, while the second wavefront sensor, namely the Mid High layer Wavefront Sensor (MHWS) will drive a commercial deformable mirror which will also have the possibility to be conjugated to the same altitude of the correspondent wavefront sensor. The entire system is of course duplicated for the two telescopes, and is based on the Multiple Field of View (MFoV) Layer Oriented (LO) technique, having thus different FoV to select the suitable references for the two wavefront sensor: the GWS will use the light of an annular field of view from 2 to 6 arcminutes, while the MHWS will use the central 2 arcminutes part of the FoV. After LINC-NIRVANA has accomplished the final design review, we describe the MFoV wavefront sensing system together with its current status.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Federico Biondi; Sagi Ben-Ami; Anna Brucalassi; R. U. Claudi; Jacopo Farinato; Hanindyo Kuncarayakti; Demetrio Magrin; Roberto Ragazzoni; Marco Riva; Sergio Campana; Pietro Schipani; Matteo Aliverti; Andrea Baruffolo; Giulio Capasso; Rosario Cosentino; Francesco D'Alessio; Paolo D'Avanzo; Oz Diner; Matteo Munari; Adam Rubin; Salvatore Scuderi; Fabrizio Vitali; Jani Achrén; José Antonio Araiza-Durán; Iair Arcavi; Andrea Bianco; E. Cappellaro; Mirko Colapietro; Massimo Della Valle; Sergio D'Orsi
Son Of X-Shooter (SOXS) is the new instrument for the ESO 3.5 m New Technology Telescope (NTT) in La Silla site (Chile) devised for the spectroscopic follow-up of transient sources. SOXS is composed by two medium resolution spectrographs able to cover the 350-2000 nm interval. An Acquisition Camera will provide a light imaging capability in the visible band. We present the procedure foreseen for the Assembly, Integration and Test activities (AIT) of SOXS that will be carried out at sub-systems level at various consortium partner premises and at system level both in Europe and Chile.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Matteo Aliverti; Oz Diner; Anna Brucalassi; Hanindyo Kuncarayakti; Andrea Bianco; Sergio Campana; R. U. Claudi; Pietro Schipani; Andrea Baruffolo; Sagi Ben-Ami; Federico Biondi; Giulio Capasso; Rosario Cosentino; Francesco D'Alessio; Paolo D'Avanzo; Matteo Munari; Adam Rubin; Salvatore Scuderi; Fabrizio Vitali; Jani Achrén; José Antonio Araiza-Durán; Iair Arcavi; E. Cappellaro; Massimo Della Valle; Sergio D'Orsi; D. Fantinel; Avishay Gal-Yam; Matteo Genoni; Mika Hirvonen; J. K. Kotilainen
SOXS (Son of X-shooter) is a wide band, medium resolution spectrograph for the ESO NTT with a first light expected in early 2021. The instrument will be composed by five semi-independent subsystems: a pre-slit Common Path (CP), an Acquisition Camera (AC), a Calibration Unit (CU), the NIR spectrograph, and the UV-VIS spectrograph. In this paper, we present the mechanical design of the subsystems, the kinematic mounts developed to simplify the final integration procedure and the maintenance. The concept of the CP and NIR optomechanical mounts developed for a simple pre- alignment procedure and for the thermal compensation of reflective and refractive elements will be shown.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Anna Brucalassi; Giuliano Pignata; José Antonio Araiza-Durán; Sergio Campana; R. U. Claudi; Pietro Schipani; Matteo Aliverti; Andrea Baruffolo; Sagi Ben-Ami; Federico Biondi; Giulio Capasso; Rosario Cosentino; Francesco D'Alessio; Paolo D'Avanzo; Oz Diner; Daniele Gardiol; Hanindyo Kuncarayakti; Matteo Munari; Adam Rubin; Salvatore Scuderi; Fabrizio Vitali; Jani Achrén; Iair Arcavi; Andrea Bianco; E. Cappellaro; Mirko Colapietro; Massimo Della Valle; Sergio D'Orsi; D. Fantinel; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo
SOXS (Son of X-Shooter) will be the new medium resolution (R~4500 for a 1 arcsec slit), high-efficiency, wide band spectrograph for the ESO-NTT telescope on La Silla. It will be able to cover simultaneously optical and NIR bands (350-2000nm) using two different arms and a pre-slit Common Path feeding system. SOXS will provide an unique facility to follow up any kind of transient event with the best possible response time in addition to high efficiency and availability. Furthermore, a Calibration Unit and an Acquisition Camera System with all the necessary relay optics will be connected to the Common Path sub-system. The Acquisition Camera, working in optical regime, will be primarily focused on target acquisition and secondary guiding, but will also provide an imaging mode for scientific photometry. In this work we give an overview of the Acquisition Camera System for SOXS with all the different functionalities. The optical and mechanical design of the system are also presented together with the preliminary performances in terms of optical quality, throughput, magnitude limits and photometric properties.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Ricardo Zánmar Sánchez; Matteo Munari; Sagi Ben-Ami; Adam Rubin; Anna Brucalassi; Hanindyo Kuncarayakti; Jani Achrén; J. K. Kotilainen; Tarun Kumar; Sergio Campana; R. U. Claudi; Pietro Schipani; Matteo Aliverti; Andrea Baruffolo; Federico Biondi; Giulio Capasso; Rosario Cosentino; Francesco D'Alessio; Paolo D'Avanzo; Oz Diner; Salvatore Scuderi; Fabrizio Vitali; José Antonio Araiza-Durán; Iair Arcavi; Andrea Bianco; E. Cappellaro; Mirko Colapietro; Massimo Della Valle; Sergio D'Orsi; D. Fantinel
An overview of the optical design for the SOXS spectrograph is presented. SOXS (Son Of X-Shooter) is the new wideband, medium resolution (R>4500) spectrograph for the ESO 3.58m NTT telescope expected to start observations in 2021 at La Silla. The spectroscopic capabilities of SOXS are assured by two different arms. The UV-VIS (350-850 nm) arm is based on a novel concept that adopts the use of 4 ion-etched high efficiency transmission gratings. The NIR (800- 2000 nm) arm adopts the ‘4C’ design (Collimator Correction of Camera Chromatism) successfully applied in X-Shooter. Other optical sub-systems are the imaging Acquisition Camera, the Calibration Unit and a pre-slit Common Path. We describe the optical design of the five sub-systems and report their performance in terms of spectral format, throughput and optical quality. This work is part of a series of contributions1-9 describing the SOXS design and properties as it is about to face the Final Design Review.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Giulio Capasso; Jani Achrén; Mirko Colapietro; Sergio D'Orsi; Sergio Campana; R. U. Claudi; Pietro Schipani; Matteo Aliverti; Andrea Baruffolo; Sagi Ben-Ami; Federico Biondi; Anna Brucalassi; Rosario Cosentino; Francesco D'Alessio; Paolo D'Avanzo; Oz Diner; Hanindyo Kuncarayakti; Matteo Munari; Adam Rubin; Salvatore Scuderi; Fabrizio Vitali; José Antonio Araiza-Durán; Iair Arcavi; Andrea Bianco; E. Cappellaro; Massimo Della Valle; D. Fantinel; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; Avishay Gal-Yam; Matteo Genoni
SOXS (Son Of X-Shooter) is a unique spectroscopic facility that will operate at the ESO New Technology Telescope (NTT) in La Silla from 2021 onward. The spectrograph will be able to cover simultaneously the UV-VIS and NIR bands exploiting two different arms and a Common Path feeding system. We present the design of the SOXS instrument control electronics. The electronics controls all the movements, alarms, cabinet temperatures, and electric interlocks of the instrument. We describe the main design concept. We decided to follow the ESO electronic design guidelines to minimize project time and risks and to simplify system maintenance. The design envisages Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS) industrial components (e.g. Beckhoff PLC and EtherCAT fieldbus modules) to obtain a modular design and to increase the overall reliability and maintainability. Preassembled industrial motorized stages are adopted allowing for high precision assembly standards and a high reliability. The electronics is kept off-board whenever possible to reduce thermal issues and instrument weight and to increase the accessibility for maintenance purpose. The instrument project went through the Preliminary Design Review in 2017 and is currently in Final Design Phase (with FDR in July 2018). This paper outlines the status of the work and is part of a series of contributions describing the SOXS design and properties after the instrument Preliminary Design Review.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
M. Rodrigues; Michele Cirasuolo; F. Hammer; Frederic Royer; C. J. Evans; M. Puech; Hector E. Flores; Isabelle Guinouard; Gianluca Li Causi; Karen Disseau; Yanbin Yang
We present preliminary results on on-sky test of sky subtraction methods for fiber-fed spectrograph. Using dedicated observation with FLAMES/VLT in I-band, we have tested the accuracy of the sky subtraction for 4 sky subtraction methods: mean sky, closest sky, dual stare and cross-beam switching. The cross beam-switching and dual stare method reach accuracy and precision of the sky subtraction under 1%. In contrast to the commonly held view in the literature, this result points out that fiber-fed spectrographs are adapted for the observations of faint targets.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Adam Rubin; Sagi Ben-Ami; Oz Diner; M. L. Rappaport; Avishay Gal-Yam; Sergio Campana; R. U. Claudi; Pietro Schipani; Matteo Aliverti; Andrea Baruffolo; Federico Biondi; Anna Brucalassi; Giulio Capasso; Rosario Cosentino; Francesco D'Alessio; Paolo D'Avanzo; Hanindyo Kuncarayakti; Matteo Munari; Salvatore Scuderi; Fabrizio Vitali; Jani Achrén; José Antonio Araiza-Durán; Iair Arcavi; Andrea Bianco; E. Cappellaro; Mirko Colapietro; Massimo Della Valle; Sergio D'Orsi; D. Fantinel; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo
The Son Of X-Shooter (SOXS)1 is a medium resolution spectrograph (R ~ 4500) proposed for the ESO 3.6m NTT. We present the optical design of the UV-VIS arm of SOXS which employs high efficiency ion-etched gratings used in first order (m = 1) as the main dispersers. The spectral band is split into four channels which are directed to individual gratings, and imaged simultaneously by a single three-element catadioptric camera. The expected throughput of our design is > 60% including contingency. The SOXS collaboration expects first light in early 2021. This paper is one of several papers presented in these proceedings2-10 describing the full SOXS instrument.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Anna Brucalassi; Oz Diner; Hanindyo Kuncarayakti; Adam Rubin; José Antonio Araiza-Durán; Andrea Bianco; Mirko Colapietro; Sergio D'Orsi; Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; Matteo Genoni; Marco Landoni; Gianluca Li Causi; Luca Marafatto; Giorgio Pariani; M. L. Rappaport; Massimo Turatto; Ricardo Zánmar Sánchez; Davide Ricci; Andrea Baruffolo; Bernardo Salasnich; D. Fantinel; Josefina Urrutia; Sergio Campana; Pietro Schipani; R. U. Claudi; Paolo D'Avanzo; Matteo Munari; Marco Riva; Giulio Capasso; Matteo Aliverti
SOXS (Son Of X-Shooter) is a new spectrograph for the ESO NTT telescope, currently in the final design phase. The main instrument goal is to allow the characterization of transient sources based on alerts. It will cover from near-infrared to visible bands with a spectral resolution of R ∼ 4500 using two separate, wavelength-optimized spectrographs. A visible camera, primarily intended for target acquisition and secondary guiding, will also provide a scientific “light” imaging mode. In this paper we present the current status of the design of the SOXS instrument control software, which is in charge of controlling all instrument functions and detectors, coordinating the execution of exposures, and implementing all observation, calibration and maintenance procedures. Given the extensive experience of the SOXS consortium in the development of instruments for the VLT, we decided to base the design of the Control System on the same standards, both for hardware and software control. We illustrate the control network, the instrument functions and detectors to be controlled, the overall design of SOXS Instrument Software (INS) and its main components. Then, we provide details about the control software for the most SOXS-specific features: control of the COTS-based imaging camera, the flexures compensation system and secondary guiding.