Marc Dubbeldam
Durham University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marc Dubbeldam.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Ray M. Sharples; Ralf Bender; Alex Agudo Berbel; Richard J. Bennett; Naidu Bezawada; Michele Cirasuolo; Paul J. Clark; George H. Davidson; Richard Davies; Roger L. Davies; Marc Dubbeldam; Alasdair Fairley; Gert Finger; R. Genzel; Reinhold Haefner; Achim Hess; Ian Lewis; David Montgomery; John Murray; Bernard Muschielok; Natascha M. Förster-Schreiber; Jeff Pirard; S. Ramsay; Phil Rees; Josef Richter; David J. Robertson; Ian Robson; Stephen Rolt; R. P. Saglia; Jörg Schlichter
KMOS is a multi-object near-infrared integral field spectrograph being built by a consortium of UK and German institutes. We report on the final integration and test phases of KMOS, and its performance verification, prior to commissioning on the ESO VLT later this year.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2006
Ray M. Sharples; Ralf Bender; Richard J. Bennett; Keith Burch; Paul Carter; Mark Casali; Paul J. Clark; Richard Davies; Roger L. Davies; Marc Dubbeldam; Gert Finger; R. Genzel; Reinhold Haefner; Achim Hess; Markus Kissler-Patig; Ken Laidlaw; M. D. Lehnert; Ian Lewis; Alan F. M. Moorwood; Bernard Muschielok; Natascha M. Förster Schreiber; Jeff Pirard; Suzanne K. Ramsay Howat; Phil Rees; Josef Richter; David J. Robertson; Ian Robson; R. P. Saglia; Matthias Tecza; N. Thatte
KMOS is a near-infrared multi-object integral field spectrometer which has been selected as one of a suite of second-generation instruments to be constructed for the ESO VLT in Chile. The instrument will be built by a consortium of UK and German institutes working in partnership with ESO and is currently at the end of its preliminary design phase. We present the design status of KMOS and discuss the most novel technical aspects and the compliance with the technical specification.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2008
Phillip Rees; Marc Dubbeldam; Ian Lewis; Stephen Rolt; Stephen Todd; Ian Tosh
The heart of the KMOS instrument is a complex optical system with over 300 separate optical paths. The optical design is spread between 4 sub-systems which have been designed at three different institutions. In order that the end to end performance of the final design can be monitored and controlled it is necessary to specify the performance and interface requirements of each sub-system clearly. This paper describes the parameters that were necessary to control so that the sub-system designs could be carried out independently while maintaining visibility and control of the end to end performance. The method of apportioning the budgets between the sub-systems and the modeling performed to verify compliance is also described.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Ray M. Sharples; Ralf Bender; Alex Agudo Berbel; Richard J. Bennett; Naidu Bezawada; Roberto Castillo; Michele Cirasuolo; Paul J. Clark; George H. Davidson; Richard Davies; Roger L. Davies; Marc Dubbeldam; Alasdair Fairley; Gert Finger; Natascha M. Förster Schreiber; R. Genzel; Reinhold Haefner; Achim Hess; Ives Jung; Ian Lewis; David Montgomery; John Murray; Bernard Muschielok; Jeff Pirard; S. Ramsay; Philip Rees; Josef Richter; David J. Robertson; Ian Robson; Stephen Rolt
KMOS is a multi-object near-infrared integral field spectrograph built by a consortium of UK and German institutes for the ESO Paranal Observatory. We report on the on-sky performance verification of KMOS measured during three commissioning runs on the ESO VLT in 2012/13 and some of the early science results.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Kjetil Dohlen; Kacem El Hadi; Sandrine Pascal; Pascal Vola; M. Llored; Tim Morris; Ariadna Calcines-Rosario; A. Costille; Benoit Neichel; Jean-François Sauvage; Thierry Fusco; Niranjan Thatte; Fraser Clarke; Ian Bryson; Hermine Schnetler; Javier Piqueras Lopez; Marc Dubbeldam
HARMONI is a visible and near-infrared integral field spectrograph equipped with two complementary adaptive optics systems, fully integrated within the instrument. A Single Conjugate AO (SCAO) system offers high performance for a limited sky coverage and a Laser Tomographic AO (LTAO) system provides AO correction with a very high sky-coverage. While the deformable mirror performing real-time correction of the atmospheric disturbances is located within the telescope itself, the instrument contains a suite of state-of-the-art and innovative wavefront sensor systems. Laser guide star sensors (LGSS) are located at the entrance of the instrument and fed by a dichroic beam splitter, while the various natural guide star sensors for LTAO and SCAO are located close to the science focal plane. We present opto-mechanical architecture and design at PDR level for these wavefront sensor systems.
Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII | 2018
Ariadna Calcines; Marc Dubbeldam; Tim Morris; Ewan Fitzsimons; Hermine Schnetler; Mathieu Cohen; Jean-Philippe Amans
The Optical Relay Module of the MOSAIC multiple-object spectrograph is used to relay 400-1800nm light picked off from the ELT focal plane to either a fibre-based integral field unit or a natural guide star wavefront sensor. Here we present the preliminary optical design offering a telecentric exit beam with a focal-ratio of F/17.718 and the opto-mechanical analysis of flexures with a study of the impact in the optical layout performances such as: deviation of the PSF centroid, tip-tilt of the image focal plane, variations of the wavefront error, optical quality and pupil wandering at the deformable mirror position.
Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII | 2018
Kacem El Hadi; Kjetil Dohlen; David Le Mignant; Fabrice Madec; Pascal Vola; Benoit Neichel; Thierry Fusco; Marc Ferrari; Jean-Gabriel Cuby; Ewan Fitzsimons; Marc Dubbeldam; Tim Morris; Fanny Chemla; Pascal Jagourel; F. Hammer
Assembly, Integration, Test and Validation (AIT/V) phases for AO instruments, in laboratory as in the telescope, represent numerous technical challenges. The Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Marseille (LAM) is in charge of the AIT/V preparation and planning for the MOSAIC (ELT-MOS) instrument, from identification of needs, challenges, risks, to defining the optimal AIT strategy for this highly modular and serialized instrument. In this paper, we present the status of this study and describe several AIT/V scenarios as well as a planning for AIT phases in Europe and in Chile. We also show our capabilities, experience and expertise to lead the instrument MOSAIC AIT/V activities.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
James Osborn; Richard Wilson; Tim Butterley; Tim Morris; Marc Dubbeldam; Frederic Derie; Marc S. Sarazin
Vertical profiles of the atmospheric optical turbulence strength and velocity is of critical importance for simulating, designing, and operating the next generation of instruments for the European Extremely Large Telescope. Many of these instruments are already well into the design phase meaning these profies are required immediately to ensure they are optimised for the unique conditions likely to be observed. Stereo-SCIDAR is a generalised SCIDAR instrument which is used to characterise the profile of the atmospheric optical turbulence strength and wind velocity using triangulation between two optical binary stars. Stereo-SCIDAR has demonstrated the capability to resolve turbulent layers with the required vertical resolution to support wide-field ELT instrument designs. These high resolution atmospheric parameters are critical for design studies and statistical evaluation of on-sky performance under real conditions. Here we report on the new Stereo-SCIDAR instrument installed on one of the Auxillary Telescope ports of the Very Large Telescope array at Cerro Paranal. Paranal is located approximately 20 km from Cerro Armazones, the site of the E-ELT. Although the surface layer of the turbulence will be different for the two sites due to local geography, the high-altitude resolution profiles of the free atmosphere from this instrument will be the most accurate available for the E-ELT site. In addition, these unbiased and independent profiles are also used to further characterise the site of the VLT. This enables instrument performance calibration, optimisation and data analysis of, for example, the ESO Adaptive Optics facility and the Next Generation Transit Survey. It will also be used to validate atmospheric models for turbulence forecasting. We show early results from the commissioning and address future implications of the results.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
T. R. Marsh; S. P. Littlefair; T. Gamble; Simon Dixon; P. Kerry; Xiaofeng Gao; Martin Black; David H. Henry; David Lunney; Richard Wilson; James Osborn; Tim Morris; S. G. Parsons; V. S. Dhillon; Christopher J. Miller; Marc Dubbeldam; Naidu Bezawada; Jorge Rodriguez Casares; Teo Munoz-Darias; E. Pallé; P. Rodríguez-Gil; T. Shahbaz; Antonio de Ugarte Postigo
HiPERCAM is a quintuple-beam imager that saw first light on the 4.2 m William Herschel Telescope (WHT) in October 2017 and on the 10.4 m Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) in February 2018. The instrument uses re- imaging optics and 4 dichroic beamsplitters to record ugriz (300–1000 nm) images simultaneously on its five CCD cameras. The detectors in HiPERCAM are frame-transfer devices cooled thermo-electrically to 90°C, thereby allowing both long-exposure, deep imaging of faint targets, as well as high-speed (over 1000 windowed frames per second) imaging of rapidly varying targets. In this paper, we report on the as-built design of HiPERCAM, its first-light performance on the GTC, and some of the planned future enhancements.
Modeling, Systems Engineering, and Project Management for Astronomy VIII | 2018
Fatima De Frondat Laadim; Mickaël Frotin; F. Hammer; E. Fitzsimons; Tim Morris; Fanny Chemla; Marc Dubbeldam; M. Rodrigues; M. Puech; Marie Larrieu; Kevin Middleton; Phil Parr-Burman; Isabelle Guinouard; Andreas Kelz; Gerard Rousset; Annemieke Janssen; Kjetil Dohlen; Kacem El Hadi; Johan Pragt; Ramón Navarro; Madeline Close; Pascal Jagourel; Ian Lewis; Gavin Dalton; Yanbin Yang
Product Assurance is an essential activity to support the design and construction of complex instruments developed for major scientific programs. The international size of current consortia in astrophysics, the ambitious and challenging developments, make the product assurance issues very important. The objective of this paper is to focus in particular on the application of Product Assurance Activities to a project such as MOSAIC, within an international consortium. The paper will also give a general overview on main product assurance tasks to be implemented during the development from the design study to the validation of the manufacturing, assembly, integration and test (MAIT) process and the delivery of the instrument.