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Dive into the research topics where Mario E. van den Ancker is active.

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Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

VLTI technical advances: present and future

Andreas Glindemann; Maja Albertsen; Luigi Andolfato; Gerardo Avila; Pascal Ballester; Bertrand Bauvir; Francoise Delplancke; Frederic Derie; Martin Dimmler; Philippe Duhoux; Emmanuel di Folco; R. Frahm; Emmanuel Galliano; Bruno Gilli; Paul Giordano; Philippe B. Gitton; Stephane Guisard; Nico Housen; Christian A. Hummel; Alexis Huxley; Robert Karban; Pierre Kervella; M. Kiekebusch; Bertrand Koehler; Samuel A. Leveque; Tom Licha; Antonio Longinotti; Derek J. McKay; Serge Menardi; Guy J. Monnet

The Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) on Cerro Paranal (2635 m) in Northern Chile reached a major milestone in September 2003 when the mid infrared instrument MIDI was offered for scientific observations to the community. This was only nine months after MIDI had recorded first fringes. In the meantime, the near infrared instrument AMBER saw first fringes in March 2004, and it is planned to offer AMBER in September 2004. The large number of subsystems that have been installed in the last two years - amongst them adaptive optics for the 8-m Unit Telescopes (UT), the first 1.8-m Auxiliary Telescope (AT), the fringe tracker FINITO and three more Delay Lines for a total of six, only to name the major ones - will be described in this article. We will also discuss the next steps of the VLTI mainly concerned with the dual feed system PRIMA and we will give an outlook to possible future extensions.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

VISIR upgrade overview and status

Florian Kerber; H. U. Käufl; Pedro Baksai; Nicola Di Lieto; Danuta Dobrzycka; Philippe Duhoux; Gert Finger; Stephanie Heikamp; Derek Ives; Gerd Jakob; Lars Lundin; Dimitri Mawet; Leander Mehrgan; Y. Momany; Vincent Moreau; E. Pantin; Miguel Riquelme; Stefan Sandrock; Ralf Siebenmorgen; Alain Smette; Julian Taylor; Mario E. van den Ancker; Guillermo Valdes; Lars Venema; Ueli Weilenmann

We present an overview of the VISIR upgrade project. VISIR is the mid-infrared imager and spectrograph at ESO’s VLT. The project team is comprised of ESO staff and members of the original VISIR consortium: CEA Saclay and ASTRON. The project plan is based on input from the ESO user community with the goal of enhancing the scientific performance and efficiency of VISIR by a combination of measures: installation of improved hardware, optimization of instrument operations and software support. The cornerstone of the upgrade is the 1k by 1k Si:As AQUARIUS detector array (Raytheon) which has been carefully characterized in ESO’s IR detector test facility (modified TIMMI 2 instrument). A prism spectroscopic mode will cover the N-band in a single observation. New scientific capabilities for high resolution and high-contrast imaging will be offered by sub-aperture mask (SAM) and phase-mask coronagraphic (4QPM/AGPM) modes. In order to make optimal use of favourable atmospheric conditions a water vapour monitor has been deployed on Paranal, allowing for real-time decisions and the introduction of a user-defined constraint on water vapour. During the commissioning in 2012 it was found that the on-sky sensitivity of the AQUARIUS detector was significantly below expectations and that VISIR was not ready to go back to science operations. Extensive testing of the detector arrays in the laboratory and on-sky enabled us to diagnose the cause for the shortcoming of the detector as excess low frequency noise (ELFN). It is inherent to the design chosen for this detector and can’t be remedied by changing the detector set-up. Since this is a form of correlated noise its impact can be limited by modulating the scene recorded by the detector. We have studied several mitigation options and found that faster chopping using the secondary mirror (M2) of the VLT offers the most promising way forward. Faster M2 chopping has been tested and is scheduled for implementation before the end of 2014 after which we plan to re-commission VISIR. In addition an upgrade of the IT infrastructure related to VISIR is planned in order to support burst-mode operations. The upgraded VISIR will be a powerful instrument providing close to background limited performance for diffraction-limited observations at an 8-m telescope. It will offer synergy with facilities such as ALMA, JWST, VLTI and SOFIA, while a wealth of targets is available from survey work (e.g. VISTA, WISE). In addition it will bring confirmation of the technical readiness and scientific value of several aspects of potential mid-IR instrumentation at Extremely Large Telescopes.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

A water vapour monitor at Paranal Observatory

Florian Kerber; Thomas Rose; Arlette Chacón; Omar Cuevas; Harald Czekala; Reinhard W. Hanuschik; Y. Momany; Julio Navarrete; Richard R. Querel; Alain Smette; Mario E. van den Ancker; Michel Cure; David A. Naylor

We present the performance characteristics of a water vapour monitor that has been permanently deployed at ESO’s Paranal observatory as a part of the VISIR upgrade project. After a careful analysis of the requirements and an open call for tender, the Low Humidity and Temperature Profiling microwave radiometer (LHATPRO), manufactured by Radiometer Physics GmbH (RPG), has been selected. The unit measures several channels across the strong water vapour emission line at 183 GHz, necessary for resolving the low levels of precipitable water vapour (PWV) that are prevalent on Paranal (median ~2.5 mm). The unit comprises the above humidity profiler (183-191 GHz), a temperature profiler (51-58 GHz), and an infrared radiometer (~10 μm) for cloud detection. The instrument has been commissioned during a 2.5 week period in Oct/Nov 2011, by comparing its measurements of PWV and atmospheric profiles with the ones obtained by 22 radiosonde balloons. In parallel an IR radiometer (Univ. Lethbridge) has been operated, and various observations with ESO facility spectrographs have been taken. The RPG radiometer has been validated across the range 0.5 – 9 mm demonstrating an accuracy of better than 0.1 mm. The saturation limit of the radiometer is about 20 mm. Currently, the radiometer is being integrated into the Paranal infrastructure to serve as a high time-resolution monitor in support of VLT science operations. The water vapour radiometer’s ability to provide high precision, high time resolution information on this important aspect of the atmosphere will be most useful for conducting IR observations with the VLT under optimal conditions.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

VISIR upgrade overview: all's well that ends well

Florian Kerber; Hans Ulrich Kaufl; Konrad R. W. Tristram; D. Asmus; Pedro Baksai; Nicola Di Lieto; Danuta Dobrzycka; Philippe Duhoux; Gert Finger; Christian A. Hummel; Derek Ives; Gerd Jakob; Lars Lundin; Dimitri Mawet; Leander Mehrgan; E. Pantin; Miguel Riquelme; Joel Sanchez; Stefan Sandrock; Ralf Siebenmorgen; Jörg Stegmeier; Alain Smette; Julian Taylor; Mario E. van den Ancker; Guillermo Valdes; Lars Venema

We present an overview of the VISIR instrument after its upgrade and return to science operations. VISIR is the midinfrared imager and spectrograph at ESO’s VLT. The project team is comprised of ESO staff and members of the original VISIR consortium: CEA Saclay and ASTRON. The project plan was based on input from the ESO user community with the goal of enhancing the scientific performance and efficiency of VISIR by a combination of measures: installation of improved hardware, optimization of instrument operations and software support. The cornerstone of the upgrade is the 1k by 1k Si:As AQUARIUS detector array manufactured by Raytheon. In addition, a new prism spectroscopic mode covers the whole N-band in a single observation. Finally, new scientific capabilities for high resolution and high-contrast imaging are offered by sub-aperture mask and coronagraphic modes. In order to make optimal use of favourable atmospheric conditions, a water vapour monitor has been deployed on Paranal, allowing for real-time decisions and the introduction of a user-defined constraint on water vapour. During the commissioning in 2012, it was found that the on-sky sensitivity of the AQUARIUS detector was significantly below expectations. Extensive testing of the detector arrays in the laboratory and on-sky enabled us to diagnose the cause for the shortcoming of the detector as excess low frequency noise. It is inherent to the design chosen for this detector and cannot be remedied by changing the detector set-up. Since this is a form of correlated noise, its impact can be limited by modulating the scene recorded by the detector. After careful analysis, we have implemented fast (up to 4 Hz) chopping with field stabilization using the secondary mirror of the VLT. During commissioning, the upgraded VISIR has been confirmed to be more sensitive than the old instrument, and in particular for low-resolution spectroscopy in the N-band, a gain of a factor 6 is realized in observing efficiency. After overcoming several additional technical problems, VISIR is back in Science Operations since April 2015. In addition an upgrade of the IT infrastructure related to VISIR has been conducted in order to support burst-mode operations. Science Verification of the new modes was performed in Feb 2016. The upgraded VISIR is a powerful instrument providing close to background limited performance for diffraction-limited observations at an 8-m telescope. It offers synergies with facilities such as ALMA, JWST, VLTI and SOFIA, while a wealth of targets is available from survey works like WISE. In addition, it will bring confirmation of the technical readiness and scientific value of several aspects for future mid-IR instrumentation at Extremely Large Telescopes. We also present several lessons learned during the project.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Regaining the FORS: making optical ground-based transmission spectroscopy of exoplanets with VLT+FORS2 possible again

Henri M. J. Boffin; Elyar Sedaghati; Guillaume Blanchard; O. A. Gonzalez; S. Moehler; N. P. Gibson; Mario E. van den Ancker; Jonathan Smoker; J. P. Anderson; Christian A. Hummel; Danuta Dobrzycka; Alain Smette; Gero Rupprecht

Transmission spectroscopy facilitates the detection of molecules and/or clouds in the atmospheres of exoplanets. Such studies rely heavily on space-based or large ground-based observatories, as one needs to perform time-resolved, high signal-to-noise spectroscopy. The FORS2 instrument at ESOs Very Large Telescope is the obvious choice for performing such studies, and was indeed pioneering the field in 2010. After that, however, it was shown to suffer from systematic errors caused by the Longitudinal Atmospheric Dispersion Corrector (LADC). This was successfully addressed, leading to a renewed interest for this instrument as shown by the number of proposals submitted to perform transmission spectroscopy of exoplanets. We present here the context, the problem and how we solved it, as well as the recent results obtained. We finish by providing tips for an optimum strategy to do transmission spectroscopy with FORS2, in the hope that FORS2 may become the instrument of choice for ground-based transmission spectroscopy of exoplanets.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

Observing with the VLT interferometer

Markus Wittkowski; Pascal Ballester; Tim Canavan; Fernando Comeron; Christian A. Hummel; Andreas Kaufer; Stephane Marteau; G. Mathys; S. Morel; P. Nass; Isabelle Percheron; Michele Peron; Monika G. Petr-Gotzens; Fredrik T. Rantakyrö; A. Richichi; Markus Schoeller; David R. Silva; Mario E. van den Ancker; Anders Wallander


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

Examining the T Tauri system with SPHERE

Gergely Csépány; Mario E. van den Ancker; P. Ábrahám; Wolfgang Brandner; Felix Hormuth


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Investigating the effect of atmospheric turbulence on mid-IR data quality with VISIR

Mario E. van den Ancker; D. Asmus; Christian A. Hummel; H. U. Käufl; Florian Kerber; Alain Smette; Julian Taylor; Konrad R. W. Tristram; Jakob Vinther; B. Wolff


Archive | 2007

Peering into the Dust: News from VISIR

Hans Ulrich Kaufl; D. E. A. Nürnberger; Leonardo Vanzi; Pedro Baksai; Danuta Dobrzycka; J Lopez Jimenez; Alfredo Leiva; Lars Lundin; Massimiliano Marchesi; Pedro Mardones; Leander Mehrgan; Jean-Francois Pirard; Chester Rojas; Daniel Salazar; Ralf Siebenmorgen; Armin Silber; Mario E. van den Ancker; Ueli Weilenmann; G. Durand; Eric J. Pantin; Margaret Marie Moerchen


arXiv: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics | 2017

Multi-epoch, high spatial resolution observations of multiple T Tauri systems

Gergely Csépány; Mario E. van den Ancker; P. Ábrahám; R. Köhler; Wolfgang Brandner; Felix Hormuth; Hector Hiss

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Alain Smette

European Southern Observatory

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Christian A. Hummel

European Southern Observatory

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Florian Kerber

European Southern Observatory

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Danuta Dobrzycka

European Southern Observatory

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Lars Lundin

European Southern Observatory

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Ralf Siebenmorgen

European Southern Observatory

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Gergely Csépány

European Southern Observatory

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Hans Ulrich Kaufl

European Southern Observatory

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