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Featured researches published by J.-L. Lizon.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

PIONIER: a 4-telescope visitor instrument at VLTI

J.-B. Le Bouquin; J. Berger; B. Lazareff; G. Zins; P. Haguenauer; L. Jocou; P. Kern; R. Millan-Gabet; Wesley A. Traub; Olivier Absil; J.-C. Augereau; M. Benisty; N. Blind; Xavier Bonfils; Pierre Bourget; A. Delboulbé; Philippe Feautrier; M. Germain; Philippe B. Gitton; D. Gillier; M. Kiekebusch; J. Kluska; Jens Knudstrup; Pierre Labeye; J.-L. Lizon; Jean-Louis Monin; Y. Magnard; F. Malbet; D. Maurel; Francois Menard

PIONIER stands for Precision Integrated-Optics Near-infrared Imaging ExpeRiment. It combines four 1.8m Auxilliary Telescopes or four 8m Unit Telescopes of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (ESO, Chile) using an integrated optics combiner. The instrument has been integrated at IPAG starting in December 2009 and commissioned at the Paranal Observatory in October 2010. It provides scientific observations since November 2010. In this paper, we detail the instrumental concept, we describe the standard operational modes and the data reduction strategy. We present the typical performance and discuss how to improve them. This paper is based on laboratory data obtained during the integrations at IPAG, as well as on-sky data gathered during the commissioning at VLTI. We illustrate the imaging capability of PIONIER on the binaries deltaSco and HIP11231. PIONIER provides 6 visibilities and 3 independent closure phases in the H band, either in a broadband mode or with a low spectral dispersion (R=40), using natural light (i.e. unpolarized). The limiting magnitude is Hmag=7 in dispersed mode under median atmospheric conditions (seeing 3ms) with the 1.8m Auxiliary Telescopes. We demonstrate a precision of 0.5deg on the closure phases. The precision on the calibrated visibilities ranges from 3 to 15% depending on the atmospheric conditions. PIONIER has been installed and successfully tested as a visitor instrument for the VLTI. It permits high angular resolution imaging studies at an unprecedented level of sensitivity. The successful combination of the four 8m Unit Telescopes in March 2011 demonstrates that VLTI is ready for 4-telescope operation.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

The MUSE second-generation VLT instrument

Roland Bacon; Matteo Accardo; L. Adjali; Heiko Anwand; Svend-Marian Bauer; I. Biswas; J. Blaizot; D. Boudon; Sylvie Brau-Nogue; Jarle Brinchmann; P. Caillier; L. Capoani; C. M. Carollo; T. Contini; P. Couderc; E. Daguisé; Sebastian Deiries; B. Delabre; S. Dreizler; Jean-Pierre Dubois; M. Dupieux; Christophe Dupuy; Eric Emsellem; T. Fechner; A. Fleischmann; Marc François; G. Gallou; T. Gharsa; Andreas Glindemann; Domingo Gojak

Summary: The Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) is a second-generation VLT panoramic integral-field spectrograph currently in manufacturing, assembly and integration phase. MUSE has a field of 1x1 arcmin2 sampled at 0.2x0.2 arcsec2 and is assisted by the VLT ground layer adaptive optics ESO facility using four laser guide stars. The instrument is a large assembly of 24 identical high performance integral field units, each one composed of an advanced image slicer, a spectrograph and a 4kx4k detector. In this paper we review the progress of the manufacturing and report the performance achieved with the first integral field unit.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2008

HAWK-I: the high-acuity wide-field K-band imager for the ESO Very Large Telescope

Markus Kissler-Patig; Jeff Pirard; M. Casali; Alan F. M. Moorwood; N. Ageorges; C. Alves de Oliveira; P. Baksai; L. R. Bedin; Eduardo Bendek; Peter Biereichel; Bernhard Delabre; Reinhold J. Dorn; R. Esteves; Gert Finger; Domingo Gojak; Gotthard Huster; Yves Jung; M. Kiekebush; B. Klein; Franz Koch; J.-L. Lizon; Leander Mehrgan; Monika G. Petr-Gotzens; J. Pritchard; F. Selman; Jörg Stegmeier

We describe the design, development, and performance of HAWK-I, the new High-Acuity Wide-field K-band Imager for ESO’s Very Large Telescope, which is equipped with a mosaic of four 2 k × 2 k arrays and operates from 0.9−2.4 μm over 7.5 � × 7.5 � with 0.1 �� pixels. A novel feature is the use of all reflective optics that, together with filters of excellent throughput and detectors of high quantum efficiency, has yielded an extremely high throughput. Commissioning and science verification observations have already delivered a variety of excellent and deep images that demonstrate its high scientific potential for addressing important astrophysical questions of current interest.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

MAD the ESO multi-conjugate adaptive optics demonstrator

Enrico Marchetti; Norbert Hubin; Enrico Fedrigo; Joar Brynnel; Bernard Delabre; Robert Donaldson; F. Franza; Rodolphe Conan; Miska Le Louarn; Cyril Cavadore; Andrea Balestra; Dietrich Baade; J.-L. Lizon; Roberto Gilmozzi; Guy J. Monnet; Roberto Ragazzoni; Carmelo Arcidiacono; Andrea Baruffolo; Emiliano Diolaiti; Jacopo Farinato; Elise Vernet-Viard; D. J. Butler; Stefan Hippler; Antonio Amorin

Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics (MCAO) is working on the principle to perform wide field of view atmospheric turbulence correction using many Guide Stars located in and/or surrounding the observed target. The vertical distribution of the atmospheric turbulence is reconstructed by observing several guide stars and the correction is applied by some deformable mirrors optically conjugated at different altitudes above the telescope. The European Southern Observatory together with external research institutions is going to build a Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics Demonstrator (MAD) to perform wide field of view adaptive optics correction. The aim of MAD is to demonstrate on the sky the feasibility of the MCAO technique and to evaluate all the critical aspects in building such kind of instrument in the framework of both the 2nd generation VLT instrumentation and the 100-m telescope OWL. In this paper we present the conceptual design of the MAD module that will be installed at one of the VLT unit telescope in Paranal to perform on-sky observations. MAD is based on a two deformable mirrors correction system and on two multi-reference wavefront sensors capable to observe simultaneously some pre-selected configurations of Natural Guide Stars. MAD is expected to correct up to 2 arcmin field of view in K band.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2000

FLAMES: a multi-object fiber facility for the VLT

Luca Pasquini; Gerardo Avila; Eric Allaert; Pascal Ballester; Peter Biereichel; Bernard Buzzoni; Cyril Cavadore; Hans Dekker; Bernard Delabre; Francesco R. Ferraro; V. Hill; Andreas Kaufer; Heinz Kotzlowski; J.-L. Lizon; Antonio Longinotti; S. Moureau; Ralf Palsa; S. Zaggia

FLAMES is a fiber facility to be installed on the A platform of the VLT Kueyen telescope, which can feed up to three spectrographs with fibers positioned over a corrected 25 arcminutes field of view. The initial configuration will include connections to the GIRAFFE and to the red arm of the UVES spectrographs, the latter, located on the Nasmyth B platform of the same telescope, is already in operation as a long slit stand alone instrument. The 8 fibers to UVES will give R approximately 45000 and a large spectral coverage, while GIRAFFE will be fed by 132 single fibers, or by 15 deployable integral field units or by one central large integral unit. GIRAFFE will be equipped with two gratings, giving R equals 5000-9000 and R equals 15000-25000 respectively. It will be possible to obtain GIRAFFE and UVES observations simultaneously. Special attention is paid to optimizing night operations and to providing appropriate data reduction. The instrument is rather complex and it is now in the construction phase; in addition to ESO, its realization has required the collaboration of several institutes grouped in 4 consortia.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

MACAO-VLTI: an adaptive optics system for the ESO interferometer

Robin Arsenault; Jaime Alonso; Henri Bonnet; Joar Brynnel; Bernard Delabre; Robert Donaldson; Christophe Dupuy; Enrico Fedrigo; Jacopo Farinato; Norbert Hubin; Liviu Ivanescu; Markus Kasper; Jerome Paufique; Silvio Rossi; Sebastien Tordo; Stefan Stroebele; J.-L. Lizon; Pierre Gigan; Francoise Delplancke; Armin Silber; Marco Quattri; Roland Reiss

MACAO stands for Multi Application Curvature Adaptive Optics. A similar concept is applied to fulfill the need for wavefront correction for several VLT instruments. MACAO-VLTI is one of these built in 4 copies in order to equip the Coude focii of the ESO VLTs. The optical beams will then be corrected before interferometric recombination in the VLTI (Very Large Telescope Interferometer) laboratory. MACAO-VLTI uses a 60 elements bimorph mirror and curvature wavefront sensor. A custom made board processes the signals provided by the wavefront detectors, 60 Avalanche Photo-diodes, and transfer them to a commercial Power PC CPU board for Real Time Calculation. Mirrors Commands are sent to a High Voltage amplifier unit through an optical fiber link. The tip-tilt correction is done by a dedicated Tip-tilt mount holding the deformable mirror. The whole wavefront is located at the Coude focus. Software is developed in house and is ESO compatible. Expected performance is a Strehl ratio sligthly under 60% at 2.2 micron for bright reference sources (star V<10) and a limiting magnitude of 17.5 (Strehl ~0.1). The four systems will be installed in Paranal successively, the first one being planned for June 2003 and the last one for June 2004.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

Performance verification of HARPS: first laboratory results

F. Pepe; Gero Rupprecht; Gerardo Avila; Andrea Balestra; F. Bouchy; Cyril Cavadore; Wolfgang Eckert; Michel Fleury; Alain Gillotte; Domingo Gojak; Juan Carlos Guzman; Dominique Kohler; J.-L. Lizon; Michel Mayor; Denis Mégevand; D. Queloz; Danuta Sosnowska; S. Udry; Ueli Weilenmann

The high-resolution spectrograph HARPS (High-Accuracy Radial-velocity Planet Searcher) will be installed on the 3.6m telescope at the ESO La Silla Observatory towards the end of 2002 and offered to the astronomical community by mid-2003. Assembly and integration of the instrument took place at the Geneva Observatory, Switzerland, during Spring 2002. At present, the verification of the system performance is in progress and is already in an advanced phase. We present in this paper the first results of our laboratory tests and describe various performance figures. We stress the outstanding mechanical and thermal stability of the instrument which are crucial for accurate radial velocity measurements. We also give a description of the simultaneous ThAr-reference technique which ensures an overall efficiency 6 times higher than with an the iodine cell absorption method. The combination of the high instrumental stability with the simultaneous ThAr-reference technique provides HARPS with characteristics highly adapted for accurate radial-velocity determination at the level of 1 ms-1. These make our instrument suitable for the detection of planetary systems and of extra-solar planets with sub-saturnian mass.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The design of ERIS for the VLT

Paola Amico; Enrico Marchetti; Fernando Pedichini; Andrea Baruffolo; B. Delabre; Michel Duchateau; M. Ekinci; D. Fantinel; Enrico Fedrigo; Gert Finger; Christoph Frank; R. Hofmann; Paul Jolley; J.-L. Lizon; M. Le Louarn; Pierre-Yves Madec; Christian Soenke; H. Weisz

The Enhanced Resolution Imager and Spectrograph (ERIS) is the next-generation instrument planned for the Very Large Telescope (VLT) and the Adaptive Optics Facility (AOF)1. It is an AO assisted instrument that will make use of the Deformable Secondary Mirror and the new Laser Guide Star Facility (4LGSF), and it is designed for the Cassegrain focus of the telescope UT4. The project just concluded its conceptual design phase and is awaiting formal approval to continue to the next phase. ERIS will offer 1-5 μm imaging and 1-2.5 μm integral field spectroscopic capabilities with high Strehl performance. As such it will replace, with much improved single conjugated AO correction, the most scientifically important and popular observing capabilities currently offered by NACO2 (diffraction limited imaging in JM band, Sparse Aperture Masking and APP coronagraphy) and by SINFONI3, whose instrumental module, SPIFFI, will be re-used in ERIS. The Cassegrain location and the performance requirements impose challenging demands on the project, from opto-mechanical design to cryogenics to the operational concept. In this paper we describe the baseline design proposed for ERIS and discuss these technical challenges, with particular emphasis on the trade-offs and the novel solutions proposed for building ERIS.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

PIONIER: a visitor instrument for VLTI

Jean-Philippe Berger; G. Zins; B. Lazareff; J. B. Lebouquin; L. Jocou; P. Kern; R. Millan-Gabet; Wesley A. Traub; P. Haguenauer; Olivier Absil; J.-C. Augereau; M. Benisty; N. Blind; Xavier Bonfils; A. Delboulbé; Philippe Feautrier; M. Germain; D. Gillier; Philippe B. Gitton; M. Kiekebusch; Jens Knudstrup; J.-L. Lizon; Y. Magnard; Fabien Malbet; D. Maurel; Francois Menard; M. Micallef; L. Michaud; S. Morel; T. Moulin

PIONIER is a 4-telescope visitor instrument for the VLTI, planned to see its first fringes in 2010. It combines four ATs or four UTs using a pairwise ABCD integrated optics combiner that can also be used in scanning mode. It provides low spectral resolution in H and K band. PIONIER is designed for imaging with a specific emphasis on fast fringe recording to allow closure-phases and visibilities to be precisely measured. In this work we provide the detailed description of the instrument and present its updated status.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

LN2 continuous flow cryostats: a compact vibration free cooling system for single to multiple detector systems

J.-L. Lizon; Matteo Accardo

In comparison to mechanical cryo-coolers, liquid nitrogen cooling has the double advantage to be free of vibration and to remain not affected by power failure. The paper reports about a very compact cryostat using a continuous circulation of liquid nitrogen which is provided from an external storage tank. Since years, this cryostat is intensively used on the ESO VLT to cool either optical or Infra Red detectors. After an introduction presenting the principle, the paper reports the performance of the cryostat recorded over many years of utilization. We also present a few additional developments which allow the use of the cryostat for more exotic applications such that Nasmyth rotating instruments or extremely stable radial velocity spectrograph. With the construction of MUSE, a new era has started for this cryostat. The large multi IFU instrument requires 24 cryostats. The last chapter of the paper describes this futurist system which is close to completion.

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Norbert Hubin

European Southern Observatory

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Domingo Gojak

European Southern Observatory

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B. Delabre

European Southern Observatory

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Reinhold J. Dorn

European Southern Observatory

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Enrico Fedrigo

European Southern Observatory

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Christophe Dupuy

European Southern Observatory

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M. Kasper

European Southern Observatory

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Gert Finger

European Southern Observatory

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Jerome Paufique

European Southern Observatory

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M. Kiekebusch

European Southern Observatory

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