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Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2000

Progress on Altair: The Gemini North Adaptive Optics System

Glen Herriot; Simon L. Morris; Andre Anthony; Dennis Derdall; Dave Duncan; Jennifer Dunn; Angelic Ebbers; J. Murray Fletcher; Tim Hardy; Brian Leckie; A. Mirza; Christopher L. Morbey; M. Pfleger; Scott Roberts; Philip Shott; Malcolm Smith; Leslie Saddlemyer; Jerry Sebesta; Kei Szeto; Robert Wooff; W. Windels; Jean-Pierre Véran

The Gemini Adaptive Optics System, (Altair), under construction at the National Research Council of Canadas Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics is unique among AO systems. Altair is designed with its deformable mirror (DM) conjugate to high altitude. We summarize construction progress. We then describe Altair in more detail. Both the Wavefront sensor foreoptics and control system are unconventional, because the guide star footprint on an altitude-conjugated DM moves as the guide star position varies. During a typical nodding sequence, where the telescope moves 10 arcseconds between exposures, this footprint moves by half an actuator and/or WFS lenslet. The advantages of altitude conjugation include increased isoplanatic patch size, which improves sky coverage, and improved uniformity of the corrected field. Altitude conjugation also reduces focal anisoplanatism with laser beacons. Although the initial installation of Altair will use natural guide stars, it will be fully ready to use a laser guide star (LGS). The infrastructure of Gemini observatory provides a variety of wavefront sensors and nested control loops that together permit some unique design concepts for Altair.


Optical Telescopes of Today and Tomorrow | 1997

GMOS: the GEMINI Multiple Object Spectrographs

Roger L. Davies; Jeremy R. Allington-Smith; Peter Bettess; Edmund Chadwick; George N. Dodsworth; Roger Haynes; David Lee; Ian J. Lewis; John Webster; Eli Ettedgui-Atad; Steven M. Beard; Maureen A. Ellis; Phil R. Williams; Tim Bond; David Crampton; Timothy J. Davidge; J. Murray Fletcher; Brian Leckie; Christopher L. Morbey; Richard Murowinski; Scott C. Roberts; Leslie Saddlemyer; Jerry Sebesta; James R. Stilburn; Kei Szeto

The two Gemini multiple object spectrographs (GMOS) are being designed and built for use with the Gemini telescopes on Mauna Kea and Cerro Pachon starting in 1999 and 2000 respectively. They have four operating modes: imaging, long slit spectroscopy, aperture plate multiple object spectroscopy and area (or integral field) spectroscopy. The spectrograph uses refracting optics for both the collimator and camera and uses grating dispersion. The image quality delivered to the spectrograph is anticipated to be excellent and the design is driven by the need to retain this acuity over a large wavelength range and the full 5.5 arcminute field of view. The spectrograph optics are required to perform from 0.36 to 1.8 microns although it is likely that the northern and southern versions of GMOS will use coatings optimized for the red and blue respectively. A stringent flexure specification is imposed by the scientific requirement to measure velocities to high precision (1 - 2 km/s). Here we present an overview of the design concentrating on the optical and mechanical aspects.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

Gemini-north multiobject spectrograph integration, test, and commissioning

Isobel M. Hook; Jeremy R. Allington-Smith; Steven M. Beard; David Crampton; Roger L. Davies; Colin G. Dickson; Angelic Ebbers; J. Murray Fletcher; Inger Jorgensen; I. Jean; S. Juneau; Richard Murowinski; Robert Nolan; Ken Laidlaw; Brian Leckie; G. E. Marshall; Terry Purkins; Ian M. Richardson; Scott Roberts; Douglas A. Simons; Malcolm Smith; James R. Stilburn; Kei Szeto; Chris Tierney; Richard J. Wolff; Robert Wooff

The first of two Gemini Multi Object Spectrographs (GMOS) has recently begun operation at the Gemini-North 8m telescope. In this presentation we give an overview of the instrument and describe the overall performance of GMOS-North both in the laboratory during integration, and at the telescope during commissioning. We describe the development process which led to meeting the demanding reliability and performance requirements on flexure, throughput and image quality. We then show examples of GMOS data and performance on the telescope in its imaging, long-slit and MOS modes. We also briefly highlight novel features in GMOS that are described in more detail in separate presentations, particularly the flexure compensation system and the on-instrument wavefront sensor. Finally we give an update of the current status of GMOS on Gemini-North and future plans.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

NFIRAOS: first facility AO system for the Thirty Meter Telescope

Glen Herriot; David Andersen; Jenny Atwood; Corinne Boyer; Peter W. G. Byrnes; Kris Caputa; Brent Ellerbroek; Luc Gilles; Alexis Hill; Zoran Ljusic; John Pazder; Matthias Rosensteiner; Malcolm Smith; Paolo Spano; Kei Szeto; Jean-Pierre Véran; Ivan Wevers; L. Wang; Robert Wooff

NFIRAOS, the Thirty Meter Telescope’s first adaptive optics system is an order 60x60 Multi-Conjugate AO system with two deformable mirrors. Although most observing will use 6 laser guide stars, it also has an NGS-only mode. Uniquely, NFIRAOS is cooled to -30 °C to reduce thermal background. NFIRAOS delivers a 2-arcminute beam to three client instruments, and relies on up to three IR WFSs in each instrument. We present recent work including: robust automated acquisition on these IR WFSs; trade-off studies for a common-size of deformable mirror; real-time computing architectures; simplified designs for high-order NGS-mode wavefront sensing; modest upgrade concepts for high-contrast imaging.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2000

Gemini multi-object spectrograph GMOS: integration and tests

D. Crampton; J. Murray Fletcher; I. Jean; Richard Murowinski; Kei Szeto; Colin G. Dickson; Isobel M. Hook; Ken Laidlaw; Terry Purkins; Jeremy R. Allington-Smith; Roger L. Davies

The Gemini Multiobject Optical Spectrographs were designed to exploit the exceptional image quality anticipated form both the active and adaptive optics systems. High mechanical stability and repeatability and efficient reconfiguration and calibration were emphasized in the design, as well as the usual requirements of obtaining excellent image quality, high optical throughput and low optical distortion. In addition, an active flexure compensation system is used to assist in achieving a primary goal of attaining velocity accuracies of 2 km/s per spectrum in multiobject mode at the highest spectral resolution. Although the field is modest, small pixels are used to fully sample images as small as 0.2 inch and 28.3 million pixels will be recorded by the detector mosaic which consists of three 2048 * 4608 EEV CCDs. In this paper, results from extensive tests made during integration and testing of GMOS N components demonstrate that the design requirements are being met.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

TMT telescope structure system: design and development progress report

Kei Szeto; Scott Roberts; Mike Gedig; Glenn Austin; Christie Lagally; Steven Patrick; Dominic Tsang; Doug MacMynowski; Mark J. Sirota; Larry M. Stepp; Peter M. Thompson

The Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) project has revised the reference optical configuration from an Aplanatic Gregorian to a Ritchey-Chrétien design. This paper describes the revised telescope structural design and outlines the design methodology for achieving the dynamic performance requirements derived from the image jitter error budget. The usage of transfer function tools which incorporate the telescope structure system dynamic characteristics and the control system properties is described along with the optimization process for the integrated system. Progress on the structural design for seismic considerations is presented. Moreover, mechanical design progress on the mount control system hardware such as the hydrostatic bearings and drive motors, cable wraps and safety system hardware such as brakes and absorbers are also presented.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

Performance of the pre-production band 3 (84-116 GHz) receivers for ALMA

Stephane Claude; F. Jiang; P. Niranjanan; P. Dindo; Darren Erickson; Keith Yeung; D. Derdall; Dave Duncan; Dominic Garcia; Brian Leckie; M. Pfleger; G. Rodrigues; Kei Szeto; Paul Welle; I. Wood; Kris Caputa; Art Lichtenberger; S-K. Pan

The Band 3 receiver, covering the 84-116 GHz frequency band is one of the 10 channels that will be installed on the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA). A total of 73 units have to be built in two phases: 8 preproduction and then 65 production units. This paper reports on the assembly, testing and performance of the preproduction series of these state-of-the-art millimeter receivers.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Adaptive optics program at TMT

Corinne Boyer; Sean M. Adkins; David Andersen; Jenny Atwood; Yong Bo; Peter W. G. Byrnes; Kris Caputa; Jeff Cavaco; Brent Ellerbroek; Luc Gilles; James A. Gregory; Glen Herriot; Paul Hickson; Zoran Ljusic; Darren Manter; Christian Marois; Angel Otarola; Hubert Pagès; Matthias Schoeck; Jean-Christophe Sinquin; Malcolm Smith; Paolo Spano; Kei Szeto; Jinlong Tang; Tony Travouillon; Jean-Pierre Véran; L. Wang; Kai Wei

The TMT first light Adaptive Optics (AO) facility consists of the Narrow Field Infra-Red AO System (NFIRAOS) and the associated Laser Guide Star Facility (LGSF). NFIRAOS is a 60 × 60 laser guide star (LGS) multi-conjugate AO (MCAO) system, which provides uniform, diffraction-limited performance in the J, H, and K bands over 17-30 arc sec diameter fields with 50 per cent sky coverage at the galactic pole, as required to support the TMT science cases. NFIRAOS includes two deformable mirrors, six laser guide star wavefront sensors, and three low-order, infrared, natural guide star wavefront sensors within each client instrument. The first light LGSF system includes six sodium lasers required to generate the NFIRAOS laser guide stars. In this paper, we will provide an update on the progress in designing, modeling and validating the TMT first light AO systems and their components over the last two years. This will include pre-final design and prototyping activities for NFIRAOS, preliminary design and prototyping activities for the LGSF, design and prototyping for the deformable mirrors, fabrication and tests for the visible detectors, benchmarking and comparison of different algorithms and processing architecture for the Real Time Controller (RTC) and development and tests of prototype candidate lasers. Comprehensive and detailed AO modeling is continuing to support the design and development of the first light AO facility. Main modeling topics studied during the last two years include further studies in the area of wavefront error budget, sky coverage, high precision astrometry for the galactic center and other observations, high contrast imaging with NFIRAOS and its first light instruments, Point Spread Function (PSF) reconstruction for LGS MCAO, LGS photon return and sophisticated low order mode temporal filtering.


Modeling, Systems Engineering, and Project Management for Astronomy VIII | 2018

Modeling and budgeting fiber injection efficiency for the Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE)

Nicolas Flagey; Shan Mignot; Kei Szeto; Alan W. McConnachie; Alexis Hill; Calum Hervieu

The Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE) will each year obtain millions of spectra in the optical to near infrared, at low (R ≃3, 000) to high (R ≃ 40, 000) spectral resolution by observing <4,000 spectra per pointing via a highly multiplexed fiber-fed system. Key science programs for MSE include black hole reverberation mapping, stellar population analysis of faint galaxies at high redshift, and sub-km/s velocity accuracy for stellar astrophysics. One key metric of the success of MSE will be its survey speed, i.e. how many spectra of good signal-to-noise ratio will MSE be able to obtain every night and every year. The survey speed is directly linked to the allocation efficiency - how many fibers in the focal surface can be allocated to targets - and to the injection efficiency what fraction of light from a target can enter the fiber at the focal surface. In this paper we focus on the injection efficiency and how to optimize it to increase the signal-to-noise ratio of targets observed in sky dominated conditions. The injection efficiency depends on the size of the fiber and requires highly precise, repeatable and stable positioning of the fiber in the focal surface. We present the allocation budget used for Conceptual Design Review and the modeling that allows to estimate the injection efficiency, which is just one part necessary to meet the science requirements on sensitivities.


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018

Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE): the prime focus subsystems: requirements and interfaces

Alexis Hill; Kei Szeto; Shan Mignot; David Horville; Alexandre Blin

MSE will be a massively multiplexed survey telescope, including a segmented primary mirror which feeds fibers at the prime focus, including an array of approximately four thousand fibers, positioned precisely to feed banks of spectrographs several tens of meters away. We describe the process of mapping top-level requirements on MSE to technical specifications for subsystems located at the MSE prime focus. This includes the overall top-level requirements based on knowledge of similar systems at other telescopes and how those requirements were converted into specifications so that the subsystems could begin working on their Conceptual Design Phases. We then discuss the verification of the engineering specifications and the compiling of lower-level requirements and specifications into higher level performance budgets (e.g. Image Quality). We also briefly discuss the interface specifications, their effect on the performance of the system and the plan to manage them going forward. We also discuss the opto-mechanical design of the telescope top end assembly and refer readers to more details for instrumentation located at the top end.

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Alexis Hill

National Research Council

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Jerry Sebesta

Dominion Astrophysical Observatory

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David Crampton

Dominion Astrophysical Observatory

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John Pazder

National Research Council

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Christopher L. Morbey

Dominion Astrophysical Observatory

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Glen Herriot

National Research Council

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