Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ralf Conzelmann is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ralf Conzelmann.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

SINFONI: integral field spectroscopy at 50-milli-arcsecond resolution with the ESO VLT

F. Eisenhauer; Henri Bonnet; Roberto Abuter; Klaus Bickert; Fabio Binca-Marchet; Joar Brynnel; Ralf Conzelmann; Bernard Delabre; Rob Conaldson; Jacopo Farinato; Enrico Fedrigo; Gert Finger; R. Genzel; Norbert Hubin; Christof Iserlohe; Markus Kasper; Markus Kissler-Patig; Guy J. Monnet; Claudia Röhrle; J. Schreiber; S. Ströbele; Matthias Tecza; Niranjan A. Thatte; Harald Weisz

SINFONI is an adaptive optics assisted near-infrared integral field spectrometer for the ESO VLT. The Adaptive OPtics Module (built by the ESO Adaptive Optics Group) is a 60-elements curvature-sensor based system, designed for operations with natural or sodium laser guide stars. The near-infrared integral field spectrometer SPIFFI (built by the Infrared Group of MPE) provides simultaneous spectroscopy of 32 x 32 spatial pixels, and a spectral resolving power of up to 3300. The adaptive optics module is in the phase of integration; the spectrometer is presented tested in the laboratory. We provide an overview of the project, with particular emphasis on the problems encountered in designing and building an adaptive optics assisted spectrometer.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

Implementation of MACAO for SINFONI at the VLT, in NGS and LGS modes

Henri Bonnet; S. Ströbele; Fabio Biancat-Marchet; Joar Brynnel; Ralf Conzelmann; Bernard Delabre; Robert Donaldson; Jacopo Farinato; Enrico Fedrigo; Norbert Hubin; Markus Kasper; Markus Kissler-Patig

The European Southern Observatory (ESO) and the Max Planck Institut fur extraterrestrische Physik (MPE) are jointly developing SINFONI, an Adaptive Optics (AO) assisted Near Infrared Integral Field Spectrometer, which will be installed in the first quarter of 2004 at the Cassegrain focus of YEPUN (VLT UT4). The Adaptive Optics Module, a clone of MACAO, designed and built by ESO, is based on a 60 elements curvature system. It feeds the 3D spectrograph, SPIFFI, designed and built by MPE, with higher than 50% K band Strehl for bright (V<12) on-axis Natural Guide Stars (NGS) and less than 35 mas/hour image motion. The AO-Module will be the first curvature AO system operated in Laser Guide Star (LGS) mode, using a STRAP system for the tip/tilt sensing. The Strehl performance in the LGS mode is expected to be better than 30% in K band.


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 | 2008

ESO adaptive optics facility

Robin Arsenault; Pierre-Yves Madec; Norbert Hubin; Jerome Paufique; Stefan Stroebele; Christian Soenke; R. Donaldson; Enrico Fedrigo; Sylvain Oberti; Sebastien Tordo; Mark Downing; M. Kiekebusch; Ralf Conzelmann; Michel Duchateau; A. Jost; W. Hackenberg; D. Bonaccini Calia; Bernhard Delabre; Remko Stuik; Roberto Biasi; Daniele Gallieni; P. Lazzarini; M. Lelouarn; A. Glindeman

ESO has initiated in June 2004 a concept of Adaptive Optics Facility. One unit 8m telescope of the VLT is upgraded with a 1.1 m convex Deformable Secondary Mirror and an optimized instrument park. The AO modules GALACSI and GRAAL will provide GLAO and LTAO corrections forHawk-I and MUSE. A natural guide star mode is provided for commissioning and maintenance at the telescope. The facility is completed by a Laser Guide Star Facility launching 4 LGS from the telescope centerpiece used for the GLAO and LTAO wavefront sensing. A sophisticated test bench called ASSIST is being designed to allow an extensive testing and characterization phase of the DSM and its AO modules in Europe. Most sub-projects have entered the final design phase and the DSM has entered Manufacturing phase. First light is planned in the course of 2012 and the commissioning phases should be completed by 2013.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

The ESO Adaptive Optics Facility

S. Ströbele; Robin Arsenault; Roland Bacon; Roberto Biasi; Domenico Bonaccini-Calia; Mark Downing; Ralf Conzelmann; Bernhard Delabre; R. Donaldson; Michel Duchateau; Simone Esposito; Enrico Fedrigo; Daniele Gallieni; W. Hackenberg; Norbert Hubin; M. Kasper; Markus Kissler-Patig; M. Le Louarn; Richard M. McDermid; Sylvain Oberti; Jerome Paufique; Armando Riccardi; Remko Stuik; Elise Vernet

The Adaptive Optics Facility is a project to convert one VLT-UT into a specialized Adaptive Telescope. The present secondary mirror (M2) will be replaced by a new M2-Unit hosting a 1170 actuators deformable mirror. The 3 focal stations will be equipped with instruments adapted to the new capability of this UT. Two instruments are in development for the 2 Nasmyth foci: Hawk-I with its AO module GRAAL allowing a Ground Layer Adaptive Optics correction and MUSE with GALACSI for GLAO correction and Laser Tomography Adaptive Optics correction. A future instrument still needs to be defined for the Cassegrain focus. Several guide stars are required for the type of adaptive corrections needed and a four Laser Guide Star facility (4LGSF) is being developed in the scope of the AO Facility. Convex mirrors like the VLT M2 represent a major challenge for testing and a substantial effort is dedicated to this. ASSIST, is a test bench that will allow testing of the Deformable Secondary Mirror and both instruments with simulated turbulence. This article describes the Adaptive Optics facility systems composing associated with it.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

Ground layer AO correction for the VLT MUSE project

Norbert Hubin; Miska Le Louarn; Ralf Conzelmann; Bernhard Delabre; Enrico Fedrigo; Remko Stuik

We describe the conceptual design of a multi-LGS based Ground Layer Adaptive Optics system feeding a visible Integral Field Spectrograph. We show that this system will be able to provide a factor two improvement in 0.2 ensquared energy. A Narrow FOV mode, delivering diffraction limited images at visible wavelengths, will be achievable by reconfiguring the four Laser Guide Stars such as to overcome the dramatic cone effect limitation at these wavelengths with single LGS. Two concepts are proposed, with and without an adaptive secondary.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

ESO adaptive optics facility progress and first laboratory test results

Robin Arsenault; Pierre-Yves Madec; Jerome Paufique; Paolo La Penna; Stefan Stroebele; Elise Vernet; Jean-Francois Pirard; W. Hackenberg; Harald Kuntschner; Johann Kolb; Nicolas Muller; Aurea Garcia-Rissmann; Miska Le Louarn; Paola Amico; Norbert Hubin; Jean-Louis Lizon; Rob Ridings; Pierre Haguenauer; José Antonio Abad; Gerhard Fischer; Volker Heinz; M. Kiekebusch; Javier Argomedo; Ralf Conzelmann; Sebastien Tordo; R. Donaldson; Christian Soenke; Philippe Duhoux; Enrico Fedrigo; Bernard Delabre

The Adaptive Optics Facility project is completing the integration of its systems at ESO Headquarters in Garching. The main test bench ASSIST and the 2nd Generation M2-Unit (hosting the Deformable Secondary Mirror) have been granted acceptance late 2012. The DSM has undergone a series of tests on ASSIST in 2013 which have validated its optical performance and launched the System Test Phase of the AOF. This has been followed by the performance evaluation of the GRAAL natural guide star mode on-axis and will continue in 2014 with its Ground Layer AO mode. The GALACSI module (for MUSE) Wide-Field-Mode (GLAO) and the more challenging Narrow-Field-Mode (LTAO) will then be tested. The AOF has also taken delivery of the second scientific thin shell mirror and the first 22 Watt Sodium laser Unit. We will report on the system tests status, the performances evaluated on the ASSIST bench and advancement of the 4Laser Guide Star Facility. We will also present the near future plans for commissioning on the telescope and some considerations on tools to ensure an efficient operation of the Facility in Paranal.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

ERIS: preliminary design phase overview

Harald Kuntschner; L. Jochum; Paola Amico; Johannes K. Dekker; Florian Kerber; Enrico Marchetti; Matteo Accardo; Roland Brast; Martin Brinkmann; Ralf Conzelmann; Bernard Delabre; Michel Duchateau; Enrico Fedrigo; Gert Finger; Christoph Frank; Fernando Gago Rodriguez; Barbara Klein; Jens Knudstrup; Miska Le Louarn; Lars Lundin; Andrea Modigliani; M. Müller; Mark Neeser; Sebastien Tordo; E. Valenti; F. Eisenhauer; E. Sturm; Helmut Feuchtgruber; Elisabeth M. George; Michael Hartl

The Enhanced Resolution Imager and Spectrograph (ERIS) is the next-generation adaptive optics near-IR imager and spectrograph for the Cassegrain focus of the Very Large Telescope (VLT) Unit Telescope 4, which will soon make full use of the Adaptive Optics Facility (AOF). It is a high-Strehl AO-assisted instrument that will use the Deformable Secondary Mirror (DSM) and the new Laser Guide Star Facility (4LGSF). The project has been approved for construction and has entered its preliminary design phase. ERIS will be constructed in a collaboration including the Max- Planck Institut für Extraterrestrische Physik, the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich and the Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri and will offer 1 - 5 μm imaging and 1 - 2.5 μm integral field spectroscopic capabilities with a high Strehl performance. Wavefront sensing can be carried out with an optical high-order NGS Pyramid wavefront sensor, or with a single laser in either an optical low-order NGS mode, or with a near-IR low-order mode sensor. Due to its highly sensitive visible wavefront sensor, and separate near-IR low-order mode, ERIS provides a large sky coverage with its 1’ patrol field radius that can even include AO stars embedded in dust-enshrouded environments. As such it will replace, with a much improved single conjugated AO correction, the most scientifically important imaging modes offered by NACO (diffraction limited imaging in the J to M bands, Sparse Aperture Masking and Apodizing Phase Plate (APP) coronagraphy) and the integral field spectroscopy modes of SINFONI, whose instrumental module, SPIFFI, will be upgraded and re-used in ERIS. As part of the SPIFFI upgrade a new higher resolution grating and a science detector replacement are envisaged, as well as PLC driven motors. To accommodate ERIS at the Cassegrain focus, an extension of the telescope back focal length is required, with modifications of the guider arm assembly. In this paper we report on the status of the baseline design. We will also report on the main science goals of the instrument, ranging from exoplanet detection and characterization to high redshift galaxy observations. We will also briefly describe the SINFONI-SPIFFI upgrade strategy, which is part of the ERIS development plan and the overall project timeline.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

GRAAL on the mountaintop

Jerome Paufique; Pierre-Yves Madec; Johann Kolb; Harald Kuntschner; Javier Argomedo; M. Kiekebusch; Robert Donaldson; Robin Arsenault; Ralf Siebenmorgen; Christian Soenke; Sebastien Tordo; Ralf Conzelmann; A. Jost; Javier Reyes-Moreno; Mark Downing; Pascale Hibon; Jose Javier Valenzuela; Pierre Haguenauer

GRAAL is the adaptive optics module feeding the wide-field IR imager HAWK-I at the VLT observatory. As part of the adaptive optics facility, GRAAL is equipped with 4 Laser-guide star wave-front sensors and provides a large field-of-view, ground layer correction system to HAWK-I. After a successful testing in Europe, the module has been re-assembled in Chile and installed at the Nasmyth-A platform of Yepun, the fourth Unit telescope of the observatory. We report on the installation of GRAAL on the mountain and on its first testing in stand-alone and on-sky.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Status of the GRAAL system development: very wide-field correction with 4 laser guide-stars

Jerome Paufique; Javier Argomedo; Robin Arsenault; Ralf Conzelmann; R. Donaldson; Norbert Hubin; L. Jochum; A. Jost; M. Kiekebusch; Johann Kolb; Harald Kuntschner; M. Le Louarn; P-Y. Madec; Ralf Siebenmorgen; Sebastien Tordo

We recall the design and present the development status of GRAAL, the Ground-layer adaptive optics assisted by Laser, which will deliver wide-field (10 arcmin), enhanced images to the HAWK-I instrument on the VLT, with an improved seeing. GRAAL is an adaptive optics module, part of the Adaptive optics facility (AOF), using four Laser- and one natural guide-stars to measure the turbulence, and correcting for it by deforming the adaptive secondary mirror of a Unit telescope in the Paranal observatory. GRAAL is in the laboratory in Europe and the integration of its laser guide-star optics is completed. The first wave-front sensor camera will be ready for its integration in the coming weeks, allowing the first system tests to start.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ralf Conzelmann's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Norbert Hubin

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Enrico Fedrigo

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robin Arsenault

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sebastien Tordo

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pierre-Yves Madec

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jerome Paufique

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Kiekebusch

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bernard Delabre

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Johann Kolb

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R. Donaldson

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge