Michael A. Carr
Princeton University
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Featured researches published by Michael A. Carr.
The Astronomical Journal | 1998
James E. Gunn; Michael A. Carr; C. Rockosi; M. Sekiguchi; K. Berry; Brian R. Elms; E. de Haas; Željko Ivezić; Gillian R. Knapp; Robert H. Lupton; George Pauls; R. Simcoe; R. Hirsch; D. Sanford; Shu I. Wang; D. G. York; Frederick H. Harris; J. Annis; L. Bartozek; William N. Boroski; Jon Bakken; M. Haldeman; Stephen M. Kent; Scott Holm; Donald J. Holmgren; D. Petravick; Angela Prosapio; Ron Rechenmacher; Mamoru Doi; Masataka Fukugita
We have constructed a large-format mosaic CCD camera for the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The camera consists of two arrays, a photometric array that uses 30 2048 × 2048 SITe/Tektronix CCDs (24 μm pixels) with an effective imaging area of 720 cm2 and an astrometric array that uses 24 400 × 2048 CCDs with the same pixel size, which will allow us to tie bright astrometric standard stars to the objects imaged in the photometric camera. The instrument will be used to carry out photometry essentially simultaneously in five color bands spanning the range accessible to silicon detectors on the ground in the time-delay–and–integrate (TDI) scanning mode. The photometric detectors are arrayed in the focal plane in six columns of five chips each such that two scans cover a filled stripe 25 wide. This paper presents engineering and technical details of the camera.
The Astronomical Journal | 2006
James E. Gunn; Walter A. Siegmund; Edward J. Mannery; Russell Owen; Charles L. Hull; R. French Leger; Larry N. Carey; Gillian R. Knapp; Donald G. York; William N. Boroski; Stephen M. Kent; Robert H. Lupton; Constance M. Rockosi; Michael L. Evans; Patrick Waddell; John Anderson; James Annis; John C. Barentine; Larry M. Bartoszek; Steven Bastian; Stephen B. Bracker; Howard J. Brewington; Charles Briegel; J. Brinkmann; Yorke J. Brown; Michael A. Carr; Paul C. Czarapata; Craig Drennan; Thomas W. Dombeck; Glenn R. Federwitz
We describe the design, construction, and performance of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey telescope located at Apache Point Observatory. The telescope is a modified two-corrector Ritchey-Chretien design with a 2.5 m, f/2.25 primary, a 1.08 m secondary, a Gascoigne astigmatism corrector, and one of a pair of interchangeable highly aspheric correctors near the focal plane, one for imaging and the other for spectroscopy. The final focal ratio is f/5. The telescope is instrumented by a wide-area, multiband CCD camera and a pair of fiber-fed double spectrographs. Novel features of the telescope include the following: (1) A 3° diameter (0.65 m) focal plane that has excellent image quality and small geometric distortions over a wide wavelength range (3000-10,600 A) in the imaging mode, and good image quality combined with very small lateral and longitudinal color errors in the spectroscopic mode. The unusual requirement of very low distortion is set by the demands of time-delay-and-integrate (TDI) imaging. (2) Very high precision motion to support open-loop TDI observations. (3) A unique wind baffle/enclosure construction to maximize image quality and minimize construction costs. The telescope had first light in 1998 May and began regular survey operations in 2000.
The Astronomical Journal | 2013
Stephen A. Smee; James E. Gunn; Alan Uomoto; N. A. Roe; David J. Schlegel; Constance M. Rockosi; Michael A. Carr; French Leger; Kyle S. Dawson; Matthew D. Olmstead; J. Brinkmann; Russell Owen; Robert H. Barkhouser; K. Honscheid; Paul Harding; Dan Long; Robert H. Lupton; Craig Loomis; Lauren Anderson; James Annis; Mariangela Bernardi; Vaishali Bhardwaj; Dmitry Bizyaev; Adam S. Bolton; Howard J. Brewington; John W. Briggs; Scott Burles; James G. Burns; Francisco J. Castander; Andrew J. Connolly
We present the design and performance of the multi-object fiber spectrographs for the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and their upgrade for the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS). Originally commissioned in Fall 1999 on the 2.5 m aperture Sloan Telescope at Apache Point Observatory, the spectrographs produced more than 1.5 million spectra for the SDSS and SDSS-II surveys, enabling a wide variety of Galactic and extra-galactic science including the first observation of baryon acoustic oscillations in 2005. The spectrographs were upgraded in 2009 and are currently in use for BOSS, the flagship survey of the third-generation SDSS-III project. BOSS will measure redshifts of 1.35 million massive galaxies to redshift 0.7 and Lyα absorption of 160,000 high redshift quasars over 10,000 deg2 of sky, making percent level measurements of the absolute cosmic distance scale of the universe and placing tight constraints on the equation of state of dark energy. The twin multi-object fiber spectrographs utilize a simple optical layout with reflective collimators, gratings, all-refractive cameras, and state-of-the-art CCD detectors to produce hundreds of spectra simultaneously in two channels over a bandpass covering the near-ultraviolet to the near-infrared, with a resolving power R = λ/FWHM ~ 2000. Building on proven heritage, the spectrographs were upgraded for BOSS with volume-phase holographic gratings and modern CCD detectors, improving the peak throughput by nearly a factor of two, extending the bandpass to cover 360 nm < λ < 1000 nm, and increasing the number of fibers from 640 to 1000 per exposure. In this paper we describe the original SDSS spectrograph design and the upgrades implemented for BOSS, and document the predicted and measured performances.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
John C. Wilson; Frederick R. Hearty; Michael F. Skrutskie; Steven R. Majewski; Ricardo P. Schiavon; Daniel J. Eisenstein; James E. Gunn; Basil Blank; C. Henderson; Stephen A. Smee; Robert H. Barkhouser; Al Harding; Greg Fitzgerald; Todd M. Stolberg; Jim Arns; Matthew J. Nelson; Sophia Brunner; Adam Burton; Eric Walker; Charles R. Lam; Paul Maseman; Jim Barr; French Leger; Larry N. Carey; Nick MacDonald; Todd Horne; Erick T. Young; G. H. Rieke; Marcia J. Rieke; Thomas P. O'Brien
The Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) will use a dedicated 300-fiber, narrow-band (1.5-1.7 micron), high resolution (R~30,000), near-infrared spectrograph to survey approximately 100,000 giant stars across the Milky Way. This survey, conducted as part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III (SDSS III), will revolutionize our understanding of kinematical and chemical enrichment histories of all Galactic stellar populations. The instrument, currently in fabrication, will be housed in a separate building adjacent to the 2.5 m SDSS telescope and fed light via approximately 45-meter fiber runs from the telescope. The instrument design includes numerous technological challenges and innovations including a gang connector that allows simultaneous connection of all fibers with a single plug to a telescope cartridge that positions the fibers on the sky, numerous places in the fiber train in which focal ratio degradation must be minimized, a large (290 mm x 475 mm elliptically-shaped recorded area) mosaic-VPH, an f/1.4 sixelement refractive camera featuring silicon and fused silica elements with diameters as large as 393 mm, three near-within a custom, LN2-cooled, stainless steel vacuum cryostat with dimensions 1.4 m x 2.3 m x 1.3 m.
The Astronomical Journal | 2004
Douglas P. Finkbeiner; Nikhil Padmanabhan; David J. Schlegel; Michael A. Carr; James E. Gunn; Constance M. Rockosi; Maki Sekiguchi; Robert H. Lupton; Gillian R. Knapp; Željko Ivezić; Michael R. Blanton; David W. Hogg; Jennifer K. Adelman-McCarthy; James Annis; Jeffrey J. E. Hayes; Ellynne Kinney; Daniel C. Long; Uros Seljak; Michael A. Strauss; Brian Yanny; Marcel A. Agüeros; Sahar S. Allam; Scott F. Anderson; Neta A. Bahcall; Ivan K. Baldry; Mariangela Bernardi; William N. Boroski; John W. Briggs; J. Brinkmann; Robert J. Brunner
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) mosaic camera and telescope have obtained five-band optical-wavelength imaging near the Galactic plane outside of the nominal survey boundaries. These additional data were obtained during commissioning and subsequent testing of the SDSS observing system, and they provide unique wide-area imaging data in regions of high obscuration and star formation, including numerous young stellar objects, Herbig-Haro objects, and young star clusters. Because these data are outside the survey regions in the Galactic caps, they are not part of the standard SDSS data releases. This paper presents imaging data for 832 square degrees of sky (including repeats), in the star-forming regions of Orion, Taurus, and Cygnus. About 470 deg2 are now released to the public, with the remainder to follow at the time of SDSS Data Release 4. The public data in Orion include the star-forming region NGC 2068/NGC 2071/HH 24 and a large part of Barnards loop.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
John C. Wilson; Frederick R. Hearty; M. F. Skrutskie; S. R. Majewski; Ricardo P. Schiavon; Daniel J. Eisenstein; James E. Gunn; Jon A. Holtzman; David L. Nidever; Bruce Gillespie; David H. Weinberg; Basil Blank; C. Henderson; Stephen A. Smee; Robert H. Barkhouser; Albert Harding; Stephen C. Hope; Greg Fitzgerald; Todd M. Stolberg; Jim Arns; Matthew J. Nelson; Sophia Brunner; Adam Burton; Eric Walker; Charles R. Lam; Paul Maseman; J. Barr; French Leger; Larry N. Carey; Nicholas MacDonald
The Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) uses a dedicated 300-fiber, narrow-band near-infrared (1.51-1.7 μm), high resolution (R~22,500) spectrograph to survey approximately 100,000 giant stars across the Milky Way. This three-year survey, in operation since late-summer 2011 as part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III (SDSS III), will revolutionize our understanding of the kinematical and chemical enrichment histories of all Galactic stellar populations. We present the performance of the instrument from its first year in operation. The instrument is housed in a separate building adjacent to the 2.5-m SDSS telescope and fed light via approximately 45-meter fiber runs from the telescope. The instrument design includes numerous innovations including a gang connector that allows simultaneous connection of all fibers with a single plug to a telescope cartridge that positions the fibers on the sky, numerous places in the fiber train in which focal ratio degradation had to be minimized, a large mosaic-VPH (290 mm x 475 mm elliptically-shaped recorded area), an f/1.4 six-element refractive camera featuring silicon and fused silica elements with diameters as large as 393 mm, three near-infrared detectors mounted in a 1 x 3 mosaic with sub-pixel translation capability, and all of these components housed within a custom, LN2-cooled, stainless steel vacuum cryostat with dimensions 1.4-m x 2.3-m x 1.3-m.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Hajime Sugai; Hiroshi Karoji; Naruhisa Takato; Naoyuki Tamura; Atsushi Shimono; Youichi Ohyama; Akitoshi Ueda; Hung-Hsu Ling; Marcio Vital de Arruda; Robert H. Barkhouser; C. L. Bennett; Steve Bickerton; David F. Braun; Robin J. Bruno; Michael A. Carr; João Batista de Carvalho Oliveira; Yin-Chang Chang; Hsin-Yo Chen; Richard G. Dekany; Tania P. Dominici; Richard S. Ellis; Charles D. Fisher; James E. Gunn; Timothy M. Heckman; Paul T. P. Ho; Yen-Shan Hu; M. Jaquet; Jennifer Karr; Masahiko Kimura; Olivier Le Fevre
The Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) is a new multi-fiber spectrograph on Subaru telescope. PFS will cover around 1.4 degree diameter field with ~2400 fibers. To ensure precise positioning of the fibers, a metrology camera is designed to provide the fiber position information within 5 {\mu}m error. The final positioning accuracy of PFS is targeted to be better than 10 {\mu}m. The metrology camera will locate at the Cassegrain focus of Subaru telescope to cover the whole focal plane. The PFS metrology camera will also serve for the existing multi-fiber infrared spectrograph FMOS.The Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) of the Subaru Measurement of Images and Redshifts (SuMIRe) project has been endorsed by Japanese community as one of the main future instruments of the Subaru 8.2-meter telescope at Mauna Kea, Hawaii. This optical/near-infrared multi-fiber spectrograph targets cosmology with galaxy surveys, Galactic archaeology, and studies of galaxy/AGN evolution. Taking advantage of Subaru’s wide field of view, which is further extended with the recently completed Wide Field Corrector, PFS will enable us to carry out multi-fiber spectroscopy of 2400 targets within 1.3 degree diameter. A microlens is attached at each fiber entrance for F-ratio transformation into a larger one so that difficulties of spectrograph design are eased. Fibers are accurately placed onto target positions by positioners, each of which consists of two stages of piezo-electric rotary motors, through iterations by using back-illuminated fiber position measurements with a widefield metrology camera. Fibers then carry light to a set of four identical fast-Schmidt spectrographs with three color arms each: the wavelength ranges from 0.38 μm to 1.3 μm will be simultaneously observed with an average resolving power of 3000. Before and during the era of extremely large telescopes, PFS will provide the unique capability of obtaining spectra of 2400 cosmological/astrophysical targets simultaneously with an 8-10 meter class telescope. The PFS collaboration, led by IPMU, consists of USP/LNA in Brazil, Caltech/JPL, Princeton, and JHU in USA, LAM in France, ASIAA in Taiwan, and NAOJ/Subaru.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2007
Ruslan Belikov; Amir Give'on; Brian Kern; Eric Cady; Michael A. Carr; Stuart B. Shaklan; Kunjithapatham Balasubramanian; Victor White; Pierre M. Echternach; Matt Dickie; John T. Trauger; Andreas Kuhnert; N. Jeremy Kasdin
The Shaped Pupil Coronagraph (SPC) is a high-contrast imaging system pioneered at Princeton for detection of extra-solar earthlike planets. It is designed to achieve 10-10 contrast at an inner working angle of 4λ/D in broadband light. A critical requirement in attaining this contrast level in practice is the ability to control wavefront phase and amplitude aberrations to at least λ/104 in rms phase and 1/1000 rms amplitude, respectively. Furthermore, this has to be maintained over a large spectral band. The High Contrast Imaging Testbed (HCIT) at the Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) is a state-of-the-art facility for studying such high contrast imaging systems and wavefront control methods. It consists of a vacuum chamber containing a configurable coronagraph setup with a Xinetics deformable mirror. Previously, we demonstrated 4x10-8 contrast with the SPC at HCIT in 10% broadband light. The limiting factors were subsequently identified as (1) manufacturing defects due to minimal feature size constraints on our shaped pupil masks and (2) the inefficiency of the wavefront correction algorithm we used (classical speckle nulling) to correct for these defects. In this paper, we demonstrate the solutions to both of these problems. In particular, we present a method to design masks with practical minimal feature sizes and show new manufactured masks with few defects. These masks were installed at HCIT and tested using more sophisticated wavefront control algorithms based on energy minimization of light in the dark zone. We present the results of these experiments, notably a record 2.4×10-9 contrast in 10% broadband light.
Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems | 2015
Hajime Sugai; Naoyuki Tamura; Hiroshi Karoji; Atsushi Shimono; Naruhisa Takato; Masahiko Kimura; Youichi Ohyama; Akitoshi Ueda; Hrand Aghazarian; Marcio Vital de Arruda; Robert H. Barkhouser; C. L. Bennett; Steve Bickerton; Alexandre Bozier; David F. Braun; Khanh Bui; Christopher M. Capocasale; Michael A. Carr; Bruno Castilho; Yin-Chang Chang; Hsin-Yo Chen; Richard C. Y. Chou; Olivia R. Dawson; Richard G. Dekany; Eric M. Ek; Richard S. Ellis; Robin J. English; Didier Ferrand; Décio Ferreira; Charles D. Fisher
Abstract. The Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) is an optical/near-infrared multifiber spectrograph with 2394 science fibers distributed across a 1.3-deg diameter field of view at the Subaru 8.2-m telescope. The wide wavelength coverage from 0.38 μm to 1.26 μm, with a resolving power of 3000, simultaneously strengthens its ability to target three main survey programs: cosmology, galactic archaeology and galaxy/AGN evolution. A medium resolution mode with a resolving power of 5000 for 0.71 μm to 0.89 μm will also be available by simply exchanging dispersers. We highlight some of the technological aspects of the design. To transform the telescope focal ratio, a broad-band coated microlens is glued to each fiber tip. A higher transmission fiber is selected for the longest part of the cable system, optimizing overall throughput; a fiber with low focal ratio degradation is selected for the fiber-positioner and fiber-slit components, minimizing the effects of fiber movements and fiber bending. Fiber positioning will be performed by a positioner consisting of two stages of piezo-electric rotary motors. The positions of these motors are measured by taking an image of artificially back-illuminated fibers with the metrology camera located in the Cassegrain container; the fibers are placed in the proper location by iteratively measuring and then adjusting the positions of the motors. Target light reaches one of the four identical fast-Schmidt spectrograph modules, each with three arms. The PFS project has passed several project-wide design reviews and is now in the construction phase.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Mary Anne Peters; Tyler D. Groff; N. Jeremy Kasdin; Michael W. McElwain; Michael Galvin; Michael A. Carr; Robert H. Lupton; James E. Gunn; Gillian R. Knapp; Qian Gong; Alexis Carlotti; Timothy D. Brandt; Markus Janson; Olivier Guyon; Frantz Martinache; Masahiko Hayashi; Naruhisa Takato
Recent developments in high-contrast imaging techniques now make possible both imaging and spectroscopy of planets around nearby stars. We present the conceptual design of the Coronagraphic High Angular Resolution Imaging Spectrograph (CHARIS), a lenslet-based, cryogenic integral field spectrograph (IFS) for imaging exo-planets on the Subaru telescope. The IFS will provide spectral information for 140x140 spatial elements over a 1.75 arcsecs x 1.75 arcsecs field of view (FOV). CHARIS will operate in the near infrared (λ = 0.9-2.5μm) and provide a spectral resolution of R = 14, 33, and 65 in three separate observing modes. Taking advantage of the adaptive optics systems and advanced coronagraphs (AO188 and SCExAO) on the Subaru telescope, CHARIS will provide sufficient contrast to obtain spectra of young self-luminous Jupiter-mass exoplanets. CHARIS is in the early design phases and is projected to have first light by the end of 2015. We report here on the current conceptual design of CHARIS and the design challenges.