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Featured researches published by Jean-Louis Lizon.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

CRIRES: A High Resolution Infrared Spectrograph for ESO’s VLT

Hans-Ulrich Kaeufl; Pascal Ballester; Peter Biereichel; Bernard Delabre; R. Donaldson; Reinhold J. Dorn; Enrico Fedrigo; Gert Finger; Gerhard Fischer; F. Franza; Domingo Gojak; Gotthard Huster; Yves Jung; Jean-Louis Lizon; Leander Mehrgan; Manfred Meyer; Alan F. M. Moorwood; Jean-Francois Pirard; Jerome Paufique; Eszter Pozna; Ralf Siebenmorgen; Armin Silber; Joerg Stegmeier; Stefan Wegerer

CRIRES is a cryogenic, pre-dispersed, infrared echelle spectrograph designed to provide a resolving power lambda/(Delta lambda) of 105 between 1 and 5mu m at the Nasmyth focus B of the 8m VLT unit telescope #1 (Antu). A curvature sensing adaptive optics system feed is used to minimize slit losses and to provide diffraction limited spatial resolution along the slit. A mosaic of 4 Aladdin~III InSb-arrays packaged on custom-fabricated ceramics boards has been developed. This provides for an effective 4096x512 pixel focal plane array, to maximize the free spectral range covered in each exposure. Insertion of gas cells to measure high precision radial velocities is foreseen. For measurement of circular polarization a Fresnel rhomb in combination with a Wollaston prism for magnetic Doppler imaging is foreseen. The implementation of full spectropolarimetry is under study. This is one result of a scientific workshop held at ESO in late 2003 to refine the science-case of CRIRES. Installation at the VLT is scheduled during the first half of 2005. Here we briefly recall the major design features of CRIRES and describe its current development status including a report of laboratory testing.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

4MOST-4-metre Multi-Object Spectroscopic Telescope

Roelof S. de Jong; Olga Bellido-Tirado; Cristina Chiappini; Éric Depagne; Roger Haynes; Diana Johl; Olivier Schnurr; A. D. Schwope; Jakob Walcher; Frank Dionies; Dionne M. Haynes; Andreas Kelz; Francisco S. Kitaura; Georg Lamer; Ivan Minchev; Volker Müller; Sebastián E. Nuza; Jean-Christophe Olaya; Tilmann Piffl; Emil Popow; Matthias Steinmetz; Ugur Ural; Mary E K Williams; R. Winkler; Lutz Wisotzki; Wolfgang R. Ansorge; Manda Banerji; Eduardo Gonzalez Solares; M. J. Irwin; Robert C. Kennicutt

4MOST is a wide-field, high-multiplex spectroscopic survey facility under development for the VISTA telescope of the European Southern Observatory (ESO). Its main science drivers are in the fields of galactic archeology, high-energy physics, galaxy evolution and cosmology. 4MOST will in particular provide the spectroscopic complements to the large area surveys coming from space missions like Gaia, eROSITA, Euclid, and PLATO and from ground-based facilities like VISTA, VST, DES, LSST and SKA. The 4MOST baseline concept features a 2.5 degree diameter field-of-view with ~2400 fibres in the focal surface that are configured by a fibre positioner based on the tilting spine principle. The fibres feed two types of spectrographs; ~1600 fibres go to two spectrographs with resolution R<5000 (λ~390-930 nm) and ~800 fibres to a spectrograph with R>18,000 (λ~392-437 nm and 515-572 nm and 605-675 nm). Both types of spectrographs are fixed-configuration, three-channel spectrographs. 4MOST will have an unique operations concept in which 5 year public surveys from both the consortium and the ESO community will be combined and observed in parallel during each exposure, resulting in more than 25 million spectra of targets spread over a large fraction of the southern sky. The 4MOST Facility Simulator (4FS) was developed to demonstrate the feasibility of this observing concept. 4MOST has been accepted for implementation by ESO with operations expected to start by the end of 2020. This paper provides a top-level overview of the 4MOST facility, while other papers in these proceedings provide more detailed descriptions of the instrument concept[1], the instrument requirements development[2], the systems engineering implementation[3], the instrument model[4], the fibre positioner concepts[5], the fibre feed[6], and the spectrographs[7].


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

ESPRESSO: the Echelle spectrograph for rocky exoplanets and stable spectroscopic observations

F. Pepe; S. Cristiani; R. López; N. C. Santos; A. Amorim; Gerardo Avila; Willy Benz; P. Bonifacio; Alexandre Cabral; Pedro Carvas; R. Cirami; João Coelho; Maurizio Comari; Igor Coretti; Vincenzo De Caprio; Hans Dekker; Bernard Delabre; Paolo Di Marcantonio; Valentina D'Odorico; Michel Fleury; Ramon Güimil García; J. Linares; Ian Hughes; Olaf Iwert; Jorge Lima; Jean-Louis Lizon; Gaspare Lo Curto; Christophe Lovis; Antonio Manescau; Carlos Martins

ESPRESSO, the Echelle SPectrograph for Rocky Exoplanets and Stable Spectroscopic Observations, will combine the efficiency of modern echelle spectrograph design with extreme radial-velocity precision. It will be installed on ESOs VLT in order to achieve a gain of two magnitudes with respect to its predecessor HARPS, and the instrumental radialvelocity precision will be improved to reach cm/s level. Thanks to its characteristics and the ability of combining incoherently the light of 4 large telescopes, ESPRESSO will offer new possibilities in various fields of astronomy. The main scientific objectives will be the search and characterization of rocky exoplanets in the habitable zone of quiet, nearby G to M-dwarfs, and the analysis of the variability of fundamental physical constants. We will present the ambitious scientific objectives, the capabilities of ESPRESSO, and the technical solutions of this challenging project.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

HAWK-I: A new wide-field 1- to 2.5-μm imager for the VLT

Jean-Francois Pirard; Markus Kissler-Patig; Alan F. M. Moorwood; Peter Biereichel; Bernard Delabre; Reinhold J. Dorn; Gert Finger; Domingo Gojak; Gotthard Huster; Yves Jung; Franz Koch; Miska Le Louarn; Jean-Louis Lizon; Leander Mehrgan; Eszter Pozna; Armin Silber; Barbara Sokar; Joerg Stegmeier

HAWK-I (High Acuity, Wide field K-band Imaging) is a 0.9 μm - 2.5 μm wide field near infrared imager designed to sample the best images delivered over a large field of 7.5 arcmin x 7.5 arcmin. HAWK-I is a cryogenic instrument to be installed on one of the Very Large Telescope Nasmyth foci. It employs a catadioptric design and the focal plane is equipped with a mosaic of four HAWAII 2 RG arrays. Two filter wheels allow to insert broad band and narrow band filters. The instrument is designed to remain compatible with an adaptive secondary system under study for the VLT.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

The exoplanet hunter HARPS: performance and first results

Gero Rupprecht; F. Pepe; Michel Mayor; D. Queloz; F. Bouchy; Gerardo Avila; Willy Benz; X. Bonfils; Th. Dall; Bernard Delabre; Hans Dekker; Wolfgang Eckert; Michel Fleury; Alain Gilliotte; Domingo Gojak; Juan Carlos Guzman; Dominique Kohler; Jean-Louis Lizon; G. Lo Curto; Antonio Longinotti; Christophe Lovis; Denis Mégevand; Luca Pasquini; Javier Reyes; J.-P. Sivan; Danuta Sosnowska; R. Soto; S. Udry; Arno van Kesteren; L. Weber

HARPS is a new high resolution fibre-fed spectrograph dedicated to the extremely precise measurement of stellar radial velocities. After being used for about one year including the commissioning runs we report a very successful implementation of the measures taken to maximise stability, efficiency and spectral performance. Using the Simultaneous ThAr Reference Method a short term precision of 0.2 m/s during one night and a long term precision of the order of 1 m/s have been achieved. Equipped with a fully automated data reduction pipeline that produces solar system barycentric radial velocities in near real-time, HARPS promises to deliver data of unequalled quality. HARPS will primarily be used for the search for exoplanets and in the field of asteroseismology. First exciting scientific results confirm these expectations.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

MAD status report

Enrico Marchetti; Roland Brast; Bernhard Delabre; R. Donaldson; Enrico Fedrigo; Christoph Frank; Norbert Hubin; Johann Kolb; Miska Le Louarn; Jean-Louis Lizon; Sylvain Oberti; Roland Reiss; Joana Santos; Sebastien Tordo; Roberto Ragazzoni; Carmelo Arcidiacono; Andrea Baruffolo; Emiliano Diolaiti; Jacopo Farinato; Elise Vernet-Viard

The European Southern Observatory together with external research Institutes is building 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 Overwhelmingly Large Telescope (OWL). The MAD module 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. MAD has just started the integration phase which will be followed up by a long period of testing. In this paper we present the final design of MAD with a brief report about the status of the integration.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

First light of SINFONI AO-module at VLT

Henri Bonnet; Ralf Conzelmann; Bernhard Delabre; Robert Donaldson; Enrico Fedrigo; Norbert Hubin; Markus Kissler-Patig; Jean-Louis Lizon; Jerome Paufique; Silvio Rossi; Stefan Stroebele; Sebastien Tordo

SINFONI is an Adaptive Optics assisted near infrared Integral Field Spectrometer, currently in the process of installation and commissioning at the Cassegrain focus of VLT Unit Telescope 4 (YEPUN) in Paranal (Chile). The focal plane instrument (SPIFFI) provides simultaneous spectra of 2048 contiguous spatial pixels covering a two dimensional field of view with almost 100% spatial fill factor and with a spectral resolution of ~3500 in the J, H and K bands. It is fed by the Adaptive Optics Module, a 60 elements bimorph deformable mirror technology / curvature sensing system, derived from MACAO and upgraded to Laser Guide Star operations. This papers reports on the Adaptive Optics Module first light (May 31st 2004). Performances in Natural Guide Star mode were validated during the first commissioning and tests were carried out in preparation to the Laser Guide Star mode. Combined operations of the AO-Module with SPIFFI will start during the second commissioning in July. SINFONI is scheduled to be offered to the community in Natural Guide Star mode in April 2005. The commissioning of the instrument in Laser Guide Star mode will take place in the course of 2005 after successful completion of the Laser Guide Star Facility commissioning.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

MACAO-VLTI adaptive optics systems performance

Robin Arsenault; R. Donaldson; Christophe Dupuy; Enrico Fedrigo; Norbert Hubin; Liviu Ivanescu; Markus Kasper; Sylvain Oberti; Jerome Paufique; Silvio Rossi; Armin Silber; Bernhard Delabre; Jean-Louis Lizon; Pierre Gigan

In April and August ’03 two MACAO-VLTI curvature AO systems were installed on the VLT telescopes unit 2 and 3 in Paranal (Chile). These are 60 element systems using a 150mm bimorph deformable mirror and 60 APD’s as WFS detectors. Valuable integration & commissioning experience has been gained during these 2 missions. Several tests have been performed in order to evaluate system performance on the sky. The systems have proven to be extremely robust, performing in a stable fashion in extreme seeing condition (seeing up to 3”). Strehl ratio of 0.65 and residual tilt smaller than 10 mas have been obtained on the sky in 0.8” seeing condition. Weak guide source performance is also excellent with a strehl of 0.26 on a V~16 magnitude star. Several functionalities have been successfully tested including: chopping, off-axis guiding, atmospheric refraction compensation etc. The AO system can be used in a totally automatic fashion with a small overhead: the AO loop can be closed on the target less than 60 sec after star acquisition by the telescope. It includes reading the seeing value given by the site monitor, evaluate the guide star magnitude (cycling through neutral density filters) setting the close-loop AO parameters (system gain and vibrating membrane mirror stroke) including calculation of the command-matrix. The last 2 systems will be installed in August ’04 and in the course of 2005.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

The ZIMPOL high-contrast imaging polarimeter for SPHERE: design, manufacturing, and testing

Ronald Roelfsema; Hans Martin Schmid; J. Pragt; Daniel Gisler; Rens Waters; A. Bazzon; Andrea Baruffolo; Jean-Luc Beuzit; A. Boccaletti; Julien Charton; Claudio Cumani; Kjetil Dohlen; Mark Downing; Eddy Elswijk; Markus Feldt; Charlotte Groothuis; Menno de Haan; Hiddo Hanenburg; Norbert Hubin; Franco Joos; Markus Kasper; Christoph U. Keller; Jan Kragt; Jean-Louis Lizon; David Mouillet; A. Pavlov; Florence Rigal; S. Rochat; Bernardo Salasnich; Peter Steiner

ZIMPOL is the high contrast imaging polarimeter subsystem of the ESO SPHERE instrument. ZIMPOL is dedicated to detect the very faint reflected and hence polarized visible light from extrasolar planets. ZIMPOL is located behind an extreme AO system (SAXO) and a stellar coronagraph. SPHERE is foreseen to have first light at the VLT at the end of 2011. ZIMPOL is currently in the manufacturing, integration and testing phase. We describe the optical, polarimetric, mechanical, thermal and electronic design as well as the design trade offs. Specifically emphasized is the optical quality of the key performance component: the Ferro-electric Liquid Crystal polarization modulator (FLC). Furthermore, we describe the ZIMPOL test setup and the first test results on the achieved polarimetric sensitivity and accuracy. These results will give first indications for the expected overall high contrast system performance. SPHERE is an instrument designed and built by a consortium consisting of LAOG, MPIA, LAM, LESIA, Fizeau, INAF, Observatoire de Genève, ETH, NOVA, ONERA and ASTRON in collaboration with ESO.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

Probing unexplored territories with MUSE: a second generation instrument for the VLT

Roland Bacon; Svend-Marian Bauer; P. Boehm; D. Boudon; Sylvie Brau-Nogue; P. Caillier; L. Capoani; C. M. Carollo; N. Champavert; T. Contini; E. Daguisé; D. Dallé; Bernhard Delabre; Julien Devriendt; S. Dreizler; Jean-Pierre Dubois; M. Dupieux; J. P. Dupin; Eric Emsellem; Pierre Ferruit; Marijn Franx; G. Gallou; J. Gerssen; B. Guiderdoni; T. Hahn; D. Hofmann; Aurélien Jarno; Andreas Kelz; C. Koehler; Wolfram Kollatschny

The Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) is a second-generation VLT panoramic integral-field spectrograph under preliminary design study. 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 simultaneous spectral range is 0.465-0.93 μm, at a resolution of R~3000. MUSE couples the discovery potential of a large imaging device to the measuring capabilities of a high-quality spectrograph, while taking advantage of the increased spatial resolution provided by adaptive optics. This makes MUSE a unique and tremendously powerful instrument for discovering and characterizing objects that lie beyond the reach of even the deepest imaging surveys. MUSE has also a high spatial resolution mode with 7.5x7.5 arcsec2 field of view sampled at 25 milli-arcsec. In this mode MUSE should be able to obtain diffraction limited data-cubes in the 0.6-0.93 μm wavelength range. Although the MUSE design has been optimized for the study of galaxy formation and evolution, it has a wide range of possible applications; e.g. monitoring of outer planets atmosphere, environment of young stellar objects, super massive black holes and active nuclei in nearby galaxies or massive spectroscopic surveys of stellar fields in the Milky Way and nearby galaxies.

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Norbert Hubin

European Southern Observatory

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Bernard Delabre

European Southern Observatory

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Enrico Fedrigo

European Southern Observatory

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Hans Dekker

European Southern Observatory

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Reinhold J. Dorn

European Southern Observatory

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Gert Finger

European Southern Observatory

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R. Donaldson

European Southern Observatory

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Jerome Paufique

European Southern Observatory

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Miska Le Louarn

European Southern Observatory

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