Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ian Evans is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ian Evans.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

A CHANDRA HIGH-RESOLUTION X-RAY IMAGE OF CENTAURUS A

Ralph P. Kraft; W. Forman; Christine Jones; Almus T. Kenter; S. S. Murray; T. Aldcroft; M. Elvis; Ian Evans; G. Fabbiano; Takashi Isobe; Diab Jerius; Margarita Karovska; D.-W. Kim; Andrea H. Prestwich; F. A. Primini; D. A. Schwartz; Ethan J. Schreier; A. Vikhlinin

We present first results from a Chandra X-Ray Observatory observation of the radio galaxy Centaurus A with the High-Resolution Camera. All previously reported major sources of X-ray emission including the bright nucleus, the jet, individual point sources, and diffuse emission are resolved or detected. The spatial resolution of this observation is better than 1&arcsec; in the center of the field of view and allows us to resolve X-ray features of this galaxy not previously seen. In particular, we resolve individual knots of emission in the inner jet and diffuse emission between the knots. All of the knots are diffuse at the 1&arcsec; level, and several exhibit complex spatial structure. We find the nucleus to be extended by a few tenths of an arcsecond. Our image also suggests the presence of an X-ray counterjet. Weak X-ray emission from the southwest radio lobe is also seen, and we detect 63 pointlike galactic sources (probably X-ray binaries and supernova remnants) above a luminosity limit of approximately 1.7x1037 ergs s-1.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2002

Emission Line Properties of Active Galactic Nuclei from a pre-COSTAR Faint Object Spectrograph Hubble Space Telescope Spectral Atlas

Joanna Kuraszkiewicz; Paul J. Green; Karl Forster; Thomas L. Aldcroft; Ian Evans; Anuradha Purushottam Koratkar

UV/optical emission lines offer some of the most detailed information obtainable about the intrinsic properties of quasars. Studies of the density, ionization and metal abundance of gas near the accreting black hole are probed through an intriguing but poorly understood complex of correlations between emission lines and overall quasar spectral energy distributions that has long suffered from a lack of large, consistently measured samples. As part of a broader effort to expand and systematize the data upon which these studies are built, we present measurements of the UV/optical emission line parameters in a sample of 158 active galactic nuclei observed with the Faint Object Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), prior to the installation of COSTAR. We use an automated technique that accounts for galactic reddening, includes iron emission blends, galactic and intrinsic absorption lines, and performs multicomponent fits to the emission line profiles. We present measured line parameters (equivalent width and FWHM) for a large number (28) of different UV/optical lines, including upper limits for undetected lines. We also study the relations between the emission line equivalent widths and luminosity (the Baldwin effect), as well as redshift (evolution). We compare results from this HST FOS sample with our previous measurements of 993 QSOs in the Large Bright Quasar Survey using the same analysis technique and sum the samples to achieve better coverage of the luminosity-redshift plane. We confirm a significant Baldwin effect for UV iron emission from Green et al. and find that evolution dominates the effect for iron and for Si IV emission. The values of the Baldwin effect slopes for all UV emission lines and the dependence of the slopes on the samples luminosity range point to a change of the SED as the cause of the Baldwin effect in the FOS sample.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The GMT-CfA, Carnegie, Catolica, Chicago Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF): a general purpose optical echelle spectrograph for the GMT with precision radial velocity capability

Andrew Szentgyorgyi; Anna Frebel; Gabor Furesz; Edward Hertz; Timothy Norton; Jacob L. Bean; Henry Bergner; Jeffrey D. Crane; Janet Evans; Ian Evans; T. Gauron; Andrés Jordán; Sang Park; Alan Uomoto; Stuart Barnes; William N. Davis; M. Eisenhower; Harland Epps; Dani Guzman; Kenneth McCracken; Mark Ordway; David Plummer; William A. Podgorski; David R. Weaver

The GMT-CfA, Carnegie, Catolica, Chicago Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF) is a fiber fed, optical echelle spectrograph that has undergone conceptual design for consideration as a first light instrument at the Giant Magellan Telescope. GCLEF has been designed to be a general-purpose echelle spectrograph with precision radial velocity (PRV) capability. We have defined the performance envelope of G-CLEF to address several of the highest science priorities in the Decadal Survey1. The spectrograph optical design is an asymmetric, two-arm, white pupil design. The asymmetric white pupil design is adopted to minimize the size of the refractive camera lenses. The spectrograph beam is nominally 300 mm, reduced to 200 mm after dispersion by the R4 echelle grating. The peak efficiency of the spectrograph is >35% and the passband is 3500-9500Å. The spectrograph is primarily fed with three sets of fibers to enable three observing modes: High-Throughput, Precision-Abundance and PRV. The respective resolving powers of these modes are R~ 25,000, 40,000 and 120,000. We also anticipate having an R~40,000 Multi-object Spectroscopy mode with a multiplex of ~40 fibers. In PRV mode, each of the seven 8.4m GMT primary mirror sub-apertures feeds an individual fiber, which is scrambled after pupil-slicing. The goal radial velocity precision of G-CLEF is ∂V <10 cm/sec radial. In this paper, we provide a flowdown from fiducial science programs to design parameters. We discuss the optomechanical, electrical, structural and thermal design and present a roadmap to first light at the GMT.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

A novel systems engineering approach to the design of a precision radial velocity spectrograph: the GMT-Consortium Large EarthFinder (G-CLEF)

William A. Podgorski; Jacob L. Bean; Henry Bergner; Moo-Young Chun; Jeffrey D. Crane; Ian Evans; Janet Evans; Gabor Furesz; Dani Guzman; Kang-Min Kim; Kenneth McCracken; Mark Mueller; Timothy Norton; Chan Park; Sang Park; David Plummer; Andrew Szentgyorgyi; Alan Uomoto; In-Soo Yuk

One of the first light instruments for the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT) will be the GMT-Consortium Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF). It is an optical band echelle spectrograph that is fiber fed to enable high stability. One of the key capabilities of G-CLEF will be its extremely precise radial velocity (PRV) measurement capability. The RV precision goal is 10 cm/sec, which is expected to be achieved with advanced calibration methods and the use of the GMT adaptive optics system. G-CLEF, as part of the GMT suite of instruments, is being designed within GMTs automated requirements management system. This includes requirements flow down, traceability, error budgeting, and systems compliance. Error budgeting is being employed extensively to help manage G-CLEF technical requirements and ensure that the top level requirements are met efficiently. In this paper we discuss the G-CLEF error budgeting process, concentrating on the PRV precision and instrument throughput budgets. The PRV error budgeting process is covered in detail, as we are taking a detailed systems error budgeting approach to the PRV requirement. This has proven particularly challenging, as the precise measurement of radial velocity is a complex process, with error sources that are difficult to model and a complex calibration process that is integral to the RV measurement. The PRV budget combines traditional modeling and analysis techniques, where applicable, with semi-empirical techniques, as necessary. Extrapolation from existing PRV instruments is also used in the budgeting process.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

A preliminary design for the GMT-Consortium Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF)

Andrew Szentgyorgyi; Stuart I. Barnes; Jacob L. Bean; Bruce C. Bigelow; Antonin H. Bouchez; Moo-Young Chun; Jeffrey D. Crane; Harland W. Epps; Ian Evans; Janet Evans; Anna Frebel; Gabor Furesz; Alex Glenday; Dani Guzman; Tyson Hare; Bi-Ho Jang; Jeong-Gyun Jang; Ueejong Jeong; Andres Jordan; Kang-Min Kim; Jihun Kim; Chih-Hao Li; Mercedes Lopez-Morales; Kenneth McCracken; Brian A. McLeod; Mark Mueller; Ja-Kyung Nah; Timothy Norton; Heeyoung Oh; Jae Sok Oh

The GMT-Consortium Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF) is an optical-band echelle spectrograph that has been selected as the first light instrument for the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT). G-CLEF is a general-purpose, high dispersion spectrograph that is fiber fed and capable of extremely precise radial velocity measurements. The G-CLEF Concept Design (CoD) was selected in Spring 2013. Since then, G-CLEF has undergone science requirements and instrument requirements reviews and will be the subject of a preliminary design review (PDR) in March 2015. Since CoD review (CoDR), the overall G-CLEF design has evolved significantly as we have optimized the constituent designs of the major subsystems, i.e. the fiber system, the telescope interface, the calibration system and the spectrograph itself. These modifications have been made to enhance G-CLEF’s capability to address frontier science problems, as well as to respond to the evolution of the GMT itself and developments in the technical landscape. G-CLEF has been designed by applying rigorous systems engineering methodology to flow Level 1 Scientific Objectives to Level 2 Observational Requirements and thence to Level 3 and Level 4. The rigorous systems approach applied to G-CLEF establishes a well defined science requirements framework for the engineering design. By adopting this formalism, we may flexibly update and analyze the capability of G-CLEF to respond to new scientific discoveries as we move toward first light. G-CLEF will exploit numerous technological advances and features of the GMT itself to deliver an efficient, high performance instrument, e.g. exploiting the adaptive optics secondary system to increase both throughput and radial velocity measurement precision.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

The GMT-Consortium Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF): an optical Echelle spectrograph for the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT)

Andrew Szentgyorgyi; Daniel Baldwin; Stuart Barnes; Jacob L. Bean; Sagi Ben-Ami; Patricia Brennan; Jamie Budynkiewicz; Moo Young Chun; Charlie Conroy; Jeffrey D. Crane; Harland W. Epps; Ian Evans; Janet Evans; Jeff Foster; Anna Frebel; Thomas Gauron; Dani Guzman; Tyson Hare; Bi Ho Jang; Jeong Gyun Jang; Andrés Jordán; Jihun Kim; Kang Miin Kim; Claudia Mendes Oliveira; Mercedes Lopez-Morales; Kenneth McCracken; Stuart McMuldroch; Joseph Miller; Mark Mueller; Jae Sok Oh

The GMT-Consortium Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF) will be a cross-dispersed, optical band echelle spectrograph to be delivered as the first light scientific instrument for the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT) in 2022. G-CLEF is vacuum enclosed and fiber-fed to enable precision radial velocity (PRV) measurements, especially for the detection and characterization of low-mass exoplanets orbiting solar-type stars. The passband of G-CLEF is broad, extending from 3500Å to 9500Å. This passband provides good sensitivity at blue wavelengths for stellar abundance studies and deep red response for observations of high-redshift phenomena. The design of G-CLEF incorporates several novel technical innovations. We give an overview of the innovative features of the current design. G-CLEF will be the first PRV spectrograph to have a composite optical bench so as to exploit that material’s extremely low coefficient of thermal expansion, high in-plane thermal conductivity and high stiffness-to-mass ratio. The spectrograph camera subsystem is divided into a red and a blue channel, split by a dichroic, so there are two independent refractive spectrograph cameras. The control system software is being developed in model-driven software context that has been adopted globally by the GMT. G-CLEF has been conceived and designed within a strict systems engineering framework. As a part of this process, we have developed a analytical toolset to assess the predicted performance of G-CLEF as it has evolved through design phases.


Grazing Incidence and Multilayer X-Ray Optical Systems | 1997

Absolute Calibration of the AXAF Telescope Effective Area

Edwin M. Kellogg; Lester M. Cohen; Richard J. Edgar; Ian Evans; Mark D. Freeman; Terrance J. Gaetz; Diab Jerius; Walter C. McDermott; Phillip J. McKinnon; Stephen S. Murray; William A. Podgorski; D. A. Schwartz; Leon P. Van Speybroeck; Bradford J. Wargelin; Martin V. Zombeck; Martin C. Weisskopf; Ronald F. Elsner; Stephen L. O'Dell; Allyn F. Tennant; Jeffery J. Kolodziejczak; Gordon Garmire; John A. Nousek; Stefan Kraft; Frank Scholze; R. Thornagel; Gerhard Ulm; Kathryn A. Flanagan; Daniel Dewey; Mark W. Bautz; Scott C. Texter

The prelaunch calibration of AXAF encompasses many aspects of the telescope. In principle, all that is needed is the complete point response function. This is, however, a function of energy, off-axis angle of the source, and operating mode of the facility. No single measurement would yield the entire result. Also, any calibration made prior to launch will be affected by changes in conditions after launch, such as the change from one g to zero g. The reflectivity of the mirror and perhaps even the detectors can change as well, for example by addition or removal of small amounts of material deposited on their surfaces. In this paper, we give a broad view of the issues in performing such a calibration, and discuss how they are being addressed in prelaunch preparation of AXAF. As our title indicates, we concentrate here on the total throughput of the observatory. This can be thought of as the integral of the point response function, i.e. the encircled energy, out to the largest practical solid angle for an observation. Since there is no standard x-ray source in the sky whose flux is well known to the approximately 1% accuracy we are trying to achieve, we must do this calibration on the ground. We also must provide a means for monitoring any possible changes in this calibration from prelaunch until on-orbit operation can transfer the calibration to a celestial x-ray source whose emission is stable. In the paper, we analyze the elements of the absolute throughput calibration, which we call the effective area. We review the requirements for calibrations of components or subsystems of the AXAF facility, including the mirror, detectors, and gratings. We show how it is necessary to have an absolute calibrated detection system available during the prelaunch calibrations to measure the flux in the x-ray beam used for calibrating AXAF. We show how it is necessary to calibrate this ground-based detection system at standard man-made x-ray sources, such as electron storage rings. We present the status of all these calibrations, with indications of the measurements remaining to be done, even though the measurements on the AXAF flight optics and detectors will have been completed by the time this paper is presented. We evaluate progress toward the goal of making 1% measurements of the absolute x-ray flux from astrophysical sources, so that comparisons can be made with their emission at other wavelengths, in support of observations such as the Sunyaev-Zeldovitch effect, which can give absolute distance measurements independent of the traditional distance measuring techniques in astronomy.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

The MANIFEST prototyping design study

Jonathan Lawrence; Sagi Ben-Ami; David M. Brown; Rebecca Brown; Scott W. Case; Steve Chapman; Vladimir Churilov; Matthew Colless; D. L. DePoy; Ian Evans; Tony Farrell; Michael Goodwin; George H. Jacoby; Urs Klauser; K. Kuehn; Nuria P. F. Lorente; Slavko Mali; J. L. Marshall; Rolf Müller; Vijay Nichani; Naveen Pai; Travis Prochaska; Will Saunders; Luke M. Schmidt; Keith Shortridge; Nicholas F. Staszak; Andrew Szentgyorgyi; Julia Tims; Minh Vuong; Lewis Waller

MANIFEST is a facility multi-object fibre system for the Giant Magellan Telescope, which uses ‘Starbug’ fibre positioning robots. MANIFEST, when coupled to the telescope’s planned seeing-limited instruments, GMACS, and G-CLEF, offers access to: larger fields of view; higher multiplex gains; versatile reformatting of the focal plane via IFUs; image-slicers; and in some cases higher spatial and spectral resolution. The Prototyping Design Study phase for MANIFEST, nearing completion, has focused on developing a working prototype of a Starbugs system, called TAIPAN, for the UK Schmidt Telescope, which will conduct a stellar and galaxy survey of the Southern sky. The Prototyping Design Study has also included work on the GMT instrument interfaces. In this paper, we outline the instrument design features of TAIPAN, highlight the modifications that will be necessary for the MANIFEST implementation, and provide an update on the MANIFEST/instrument interfaces.


Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII | 2018

The optical design of the G-CLEF Spectrograph: the first light instrument for the GMT

Sagi Ben-Ami; Andrew H. Szentgyorgyi; William A. Podgorski; Mark A. Mueller; Ian Evans; Stuart McMuldroch; Jeffrey D. Crane

for the GMT Sagi Ben-Ami, Jeffrey D. Crane, Ian Evans, Stuart McMcmuldroch, Mark Mueller, William Podgorski, Andrew Szentgyorgyi Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, 60 Garden St., Cambridge, MA 02140; UCO/Lick Observatory, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 The Observatories of the Carnegie Institution for Science, 813 Santa Barbara Street, Pasadena, CA 91101 Abstract The GMT-Consortium Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF), one of the first light instruments for the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT), is a fiber-fed, high-resolution echelle spectrograph. G-CLEF is expected to proceed towards fabrication in the coming months. In this paper, we present the current, pre-construction G-CLEF optical design, with an emphasis on the innovative features derived for the spectrograph fiber-feed, the implementation of a volume-phase holographic (VPH)based cross disperser with enhanced blue throughput and our novel solutions for a multi-colored exposure meter and a flat-fielding system.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The G-CLEF spectrograph optical design

Gábor Fűrész; Harland Epps; Stuart I. Barnes; William A. Podgorski; Andrew Szentgyorgyi; Mark Mueller; Daniel Baldwin; Jacob L. Bean; Henry Bergner; Moo-Young Chun; Jeffrey D. Crane; Janet Evans; Ian Evans; Jeff Foster; Thomas Gauron; Dani Guzman; Edward Hertz; Andrés Jordán; Kang-Min Kim; Kenneth McCracken; Timothy Norton; Mark Ordway; Chan Park; Sang Park; Dave Plummer; Alan Uomoto; In-Soo Yuk

The GMT-Consortium Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF) is a fiber fed, optical echelle spectrograph, which has been selected as a first light instrument for the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT) currently under construction at the Las Campanas Observatory. We designed G-CLEF as a general-purpose echelle spectrograph with a precision radial velocity (PRV) capability goal of 0.1 m/s, which will enable it to detect/measure the mass of an Earth-sized planet orbiting a Solar-type star in its habitable zone. This goal imposes challenging requirements on all aspects of the instrument and some of those are best incorporated directly into the optical design process. In this paper we describe the preliminary optical design of the G-CLEF instrument and briefly describe some novel solutions we have introduced into the asymmetric white pupil echelle configuration.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ian Evans's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeffrey D. Crane

Carnegie Institution for Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Janet Deponte Evans

Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kang-Min Kim

Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Moo-Young Chun

Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge