Remko Stuik
Leiden University
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Archive | 2012
Gavin Dalton; Scott Trager; Don Carlos Abrams; David Carter; P. Bonifacio; J. Alfonso L. Aguerri; Mike MacIntosh; Christopher H. Evans; Ian Lewis; Ramón Navarro; Tibor Agócs; Kevin Dee; Sophie Rousset; Ian Tosh; Kevin Middleton; J. Pragt; David Terrett; Matthew Brock; Chris R. Benn; Marc Verheijen; Diego Cano Infantes; Craige Bevil; Iain A. Steele; Chris Mottram; Stuart Bates; Francis J. Gribbin; Jürg Rey; Luis Fernando Rodriguez; Jose Miguel Delgado; Isabelle Guinouard
Wide-field multi-object spectroscopy is a high priority for European astronomy over the next decade. Most 8-10m telescopes have a small field of view, making 4-m class telescopes a particularly attractive option for wide-field instruments. We present a science case and design drivers for a wide-field multi-object spectrograph (MOS) with integral field units for the 4.2-m William Herschel Telescope (WHT) on La Palma. The instrument intends to take advantage of a future prime-focus corrector and atmospheric-dispersion corrector (Agocs et al, this conf.) that will deliver a field of view 2 deg in diameter, with good throughput from 370 to 1,000 nm. The science programs cluster into three groups needing three different resolving powers R: (1) high-precision radial-velocities for Gaia-related Milky Way dynamics, cosmological redshift surveys, and galaxy evolution studies (R = 5,000), (2) galaxy disk velocity dispersions (R = 10,000) and (3) high-precision stellar element abundances for Milky Way archaeology (R = 20,000). The multiplex requirements of the different science cases range from a few hundred to a few thousand, and a range of fibre-positioner technologies are considered. Several options for the spectrograph are discussed, building in part on published design studies for E-ELT spectrographs. Indeed, a WHT MOS will not only efficiently deliver data for exploitation of important imaging surveys planned for the coming decade, but will also serve as a test-bed to optimize the design of MOS instruments for the future E-ELT.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
Roland Bacon; Matteo Accardo; L. Adjali; Heiko Anwand; Svend-Marian Bauer; I. Biswas; J. Blaizot; D. Boudon; Sylvie Brau-Nogue; Jarle Brinchmann; P. Caillier; L. Capoani; C. M. Carollo; T. Contini; P. Couderc; E. Daguisé; Sebastian Deiries; B. Delabre; S. Dreizler; Jean-Pierre Dubois; M. Dupieux; Christophe Dupuy; Eric Emsellem; T. Fechner; A. Fleischmann; Marc François; G. Gallou; T. Gharsa; Andreas Glindemann; Domingo Gojak
Summary: The Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) is a second-generation VLT panoramic integral-field spectrograph currently in manufacturing, assembly and integration phase. MUSE has a field of 1x1 arcmin2 sampled at 0.2x0.2 arcsec2 and is assisted by the VLT ground layer adaptive optics ESO facility using four laser guide stars. The instrument is a large assembly of 24 identical high performance integral field units, each one composed of an advanced image slicer, a spectrograph and a 4kx4k detector. In this paper we review the progress of the manufacturing and report the performance achieved with the first integral field unit.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
I. A. G. Snellen; R. de Kok; J. L. Birkby; Bernhard R. Brandl; M. Brogi; Christoph U. Keller; Matthew A. Kenworthy; H. Schwarz; Remko Stuik
Context. Ground-based high-dispersion (R 100,000) spectroscopy (HDS) is proving to be a powerful technique with which to characterize extrasolar planets. The planet signal is distilled from the bright starlight, combining spectral and time-di erential filtering techniques. In parallel, high-contrast imaging (HCI) is developing rapidly, aimed at spatially separating the planet from the star. While HDS is limited by the overwhelming noise from the host star, HCI is limited by residual quasi-static speckles. Both techniques currently reach planet-star contrast limits down to 10 5 , albeit for very di erent types of planetary systems. Aims. In this work, we discuss a way to combine HDS and HCI (HDS+HCI). For a planet located at a resolvable angular distance from its host star, the starlight can be reduced up to several orders of magnitude using adaptive optics and/or coronography. In addition, the remaining starlight can be filtered out using high-dispersion spectroscopy, utilizing the significantly di erent (or Doppler shifted) high-dispersion spectra of the planet and star. In this way, HDS+HCI can in principle reach contrast limits of 10 5 10 5 , although in practice this will be limited by photon noise and/or sky-background. In contrast to current direct imaging techniques, such as Angular Di erential Imaging and Spectral Di erential Imaging, it will work well at small working angles and is much less sensitive to speckle noise. For the discovery of previously unknown planets HDS+HCI requires a high-contrast adaptive optics system combined with a high-dispersion R 100,000 integral field spectrograph (IFS). This combination currently does not exist, but is planned for the European Extremely Large Telescope. Methods. We present simulations of HDS+HCI observations with the E-ELT, both probing thermal emission from a planet at infrared wavelengths, and starlight reflected o a planet atmosphere at optical wavelengths. For the infrared simulations we use the baseline parameters of the E-ELT and METIS instrument, with the latter combining extreme adaptive optics with an R=100,000 IFS. We include realistic models of the adaptive optics performance and atmospheric transmission and emission. For the optical simulation we also assume R=100,000 IFS with adaptive optics capabilities at the E-ELT. Results. One night of HDS+HCI observations with the E-ELT at 4.8 m ( = 0:07 m) can detect a planet orbiting Cen A with a radius of R=1.5 Rearth and a twin-Earth thermal spectrum of Teq=300 K at a signal-to-noise (S/N) of 5. In the optical, with a Strehl ratio performance of 0.3, reflected light from an Earth-size planet in the habitable zone of Proxima Centauri can be detected at a S/N of 10 in the same time frame. Recently, first HDS+HCI observations have shown the potential of this technique by determining the spin-rotation of the young massive exoplanet Pictoris b. Conclusions. The exploration of the planetary systems of our neighbor stars is of great scientific and philosophical value. The HDS+HCI technique has the potential to detect and characterize temperate rocky planets in their habitable zones. Exoplanet scientists should not shy away from claiming a significant fraction of the future ELTs to make such observations possible.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Gavin Dalton; Scott Trager; Don Carlos Abrams; David Carter; P. Bonifacio; J. Alfonso L. Aguerri; Mike MacIntosh; C. J. Evans; Ian Lewis; Ramón Navarro; Tibor Agócs; Kevin Dee; Sophie Rousset; Ian Tosh; Kevin Middleton; J. Pragt; David Terrett; Matthew Brock; Chris R. Benn; Marc Verheijen; Diego Cano Infantes; Craige Bevil; Iain A. Steele; Chris Mottram; Stuart Bates; Francis J. Gribbin; Jürg Rey; Luis Fernando Rodriguez; Jose Miguel Delgado; Isabelle Guinouard
We present the preliminary design of the WEAVE next generation spectroscopy facility for the William Herschel Telescope (WHT), principally targeting optical ground-based follow up of upcoming ground-based (LOFAR) and spacebased (Gaia) surveys. WEAVE is a multi-object and multi-IFU facility utilizing a new 2 degree prime focus field of view at the WHT, with a buffered pick and place positioner system hosting 1000 multi-object (MOS) fibres or up to 30 integral field units for each observation. The fibres are fed to a single spectrograph, with a pair of 8k(spectral) x 6k (spatial) pixel cameras, located within the WHT GHRIL enclosure on the telescope Nasmyth platform, supporting observations at R~5000 over the full 370-1000nm wavelength range in a single exposure, or a high resolution mode with limited coverage in each arm at R~20000.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2004
Daniel Gisler; Hans Martin Schmid; Christian Thalmann; Hans Peter Povel; J. O. Stenflo; Franco Joos; Markus Feldt; Rainer Lenzen; Jaap Tinbergen; R. Gratton; Remko Stuik; Daphne Stam; Wolfgang Brandner; Stefan Hippler; Massimo Turatto; R. Neuhäuser; C. Dominik; Artie P. Hatzes; Thomas Henning; Jorge Lima; A. Quirrenbach; L. B. F. M. Waters; G. Wuchterl; Hans Zinnecker
We present results from a phase A study supported by ESO for a VLT instrument for the search and investigation of extrasolar planets. The envisaged CHEOPS (CHaracterizing Extrasolar planets by Opto-infrared Polarization and Spectroscopy) instrument consists of an extreme AO system, a spectroscopic integral field unit and an imaging polarimeter. This paper describes the conceptual design of the imaging polarimeter which is based on the ZIMPOL (Zurich IMaging POLarimeter) technique using a fast polarization modulator combined with a demodulating CCD camera. ZIMPOL is capable of detecting polarization signals on the order of p=0.001% as demonstrated in solar applications. We discuss the planned implementation of ZIMPOL within the CHEOPS instrument, in particular the design of the polarization modulator. Further we describe strategies to minimize the instrumental effects and to enhance the overall measuring efficiency in order to achieve the very demanding science goals.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2006
Roland Bacon; Svend-Marian Bauer; P. Boehm; D. Boudon; Sylvie Brau-Nogue; P. Caillier; L. Capoani; C. M. Carollo; N. Champavert; T. Contini; E. Daguisé; D. Dallé; Bernhard Delabre; Julien Devriendt; S. Dreizler; Jean-Pierre Dubois; M. Dupieux; J. P. Dupin; Eric Emsellem; Pierre Ferruit; Marijn Franx; G. Gallou; J. Gerssen; B. Guiderdoni; T. Hahn; D. Hofmann; Aurélien Jarno; Andreas Kelz; C. Koehler; Wolfram Kollatschny
The Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) is a second-generation VLT panoramic integral-field spectrograph under preliminary design study. MUSE has a field of 1x1 arcmin2 sampled at 0.2x0.2 arcsec2 and is assisted by the VLT ground layer adaptive optics ESO facility using four laser guide stars. The simultaneous spectral range is 0.465-0.93 μm, at a resolution of R~3000. MUSE couples the discovery potential of a large imaging device to the measuring capabilities of a high-quality spectrograph, while taking advantage of the increased spatial resolution provided by adaptive optics. This makes MUSE a unique and tremendously powerful instrument for discovering and characterizing objects that lie beyond the reach of even the deepest imaging surveys. MUSE has also a high spatial resolution mode with 7.5x7.5 arcsec2 field of view sampled at 25 milli-arcsec. In this mode MUSE should be able to obtain diffraction limited data-cubes in the 0.6-0.93 μm wavelength range. Although the MUSE design has been optimized for the study of galaxy formation and evolution, it has a wide range of possible applications; e.g. monitoring of outer planets atmosphere, environment of young stellar objects, super massive black holes and active nuclei in nearby galaxies or massive spectroscopic surveys of stellar fields in the Milky Way and nearby galaxies.
arXiv: Astrophysics | 2008
Bernhard R. Brandl; Rainer Lenzen; E. Pantin; Alistair Glasse; Joris Blommaert; Lars Venema; Frank Molster; Ralf Siebenmorgen; Hermann Boehnhardt; Ewine F. van Dishoeck; Paul van der Werf; Thomas Henning; Wolfgang Brandner; Pierre-Olivier Lagage; T. J. T. Moore; M. Baes; Christoffel Waelkens; Christopher M. Wright; Hans Ulrich Kaufl; Sarah Kendrew; Remko Stuik; Laurent Jolissaint
METIS will be among the first generation of scientific instruments on the E-ELT. Focusing on highest angular resolution and high spectral resolution, METIS will provide diffraction limited imaging and coronagraphy from 3-14μm over an 20x20° field of view, as well as integral field spectroscopy at R ~ 100,000 from 2.9-5.3μm. In addition, METIS provides medium-resolution (R ~ 5000) long slit spectroscopy, and polarimetric measurements at N band. While the baseline concept has already been discussed at previous conferences, this paper focuses on the significant developments over the past two years in several areas: The science case has been updated to account for recent progress in the main science areas circum-stellar disks and the formation of planets, exoplanet detection and characterization, Solar system formation, massive stars and clusters, and star formation in external galaxies. We discuss the developments in the adaptive optics (AO) concept for METIS, the telescope interface, and the instrument modelling. Last but not least we provide an overview of our technology development programs, which ranges from coronagraphic masks, immersed gratings, and cryogenic beam chopper to novel approaches to mirror polishing, background calibration and cryo-cooling. These developments have further enhanced the design and technology readiness of METIS to reliably serve as an early discovery machine on the E-ELT.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
R. Davies; Josef Schubert; Michael Hartl; J. Alves; Yann Clenet; Florian Lang-Bardl; H. Nicklas; J.-U. Pott; Roberto Ragazzoni; Eline Tolstoy; Tibor Agócs; H. Anwand-Heerwart; Santiago Barboza; Pierre Baudoz; Ralf Bender; Peter Bizenberger; A. Boccaletti; W. Boland; P. Bonifacio; Florian Briegel; T. Buey; F. Chapron; M. Cohen; O. Czoske; S. Dreizler; R. Falomo; Philippe Feautrier; N. M. Förster Schreiber; Eric Gendron; R. Genzel
MICADO will equip the E-ELT with a first light capability for diffraction limited imaging at near-infrared wavelengths. The instrument’s observing modes focus on various flavours of imaging, including astrometric, high contrast, and time resolved. There is also a single object spectroscopic mode optimised for wavelength coverage at moderately high resolution. This contribution provides an overview of the key functionality of the instrument, outlining the scientific rationale for its observing modes. The interface between MICADO and the adaptive optics system MAORY that feeds it is summarised. The design of the instrument is discussed, focusing on the optics and mechanisms inside the cryostat, together with a brief overview of the other key sub-systems.MICADO will be the first-light wide-field imager for the European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT) and will provide difiraction limited imaging (7mas at 1.2mm) over a ~53 arcsecond field of view. In order to support various consortium activities we have developed a first version of SimCADO: an instrument simulator for MICADO. SimCADO uses the results of the detailed simulation efforts conducted for each of the separate consortium-internal work packages in order to generate a model of the optical path from source to detector readout. SimCADO is thus a tool to provide scientific context to both the science and instrument development teams who are ultimately responsible for the final design and future capabilities of the MICADO instrument. Here we present an overview of the inner workings of SimCADO and outline our plan for its further development.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2008
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
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.