Roberto López
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Roberto López.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2008
Alejandro Oscoz; R. Rebolo; Roberto López; Antonio Pérez-Garrido; Jorge Andrés Pérez; Sergi R. Hildebrandt; Luis Fernando Rodriguez; Juan José Piqueras; Isidro Villó; José Miguel González; Rafael Barrena; Gabriel Gómez; Aníbal García; Pilar Montañés; Alfred Rosenberg; Emilio Cadavid; A. Calcines; Anastasio Díaz-Sánchez; R. Kohley; Y. Martín; José Peñate; V. Sánchez
FastCam is an instrument jointly developed by the Spanish Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias and the Universidad Politécnica de Cartagena designed to obtain high spatial resolution images in the optical wavelength range from ground-based telescopes. The instrument consists of a very low noise and very fast readout speed EMCCD camera capable of reaching the diffraction limit of medium-sized telescopes from 500 to 850 nm. FastCam incorporates a FPGAs-based device to save and evaluate those images minimally disturbed by atmospheric turbulence in real time. The undisturbed images represent a small fraction of the observations. Therefore, a special software package has been developed to extract, from cubes of tens of thousands of images, those with better quality than a given level. This is done in parallel with the data acquisition at the telescope. After the first tests in the laboratory, FastCam has been successfully tested in three telescopes: the 1.52-meter TCS (Teide Observatory), the 2.5-meter NOT, and the 4.2-meter WHT (Roque de los Muchachos Observatory). The theoretical diffraction limit of each telescope has been reached in the I band (850 nm) -0.15, 0.08 and 0.05 arcsec, respectively-, and similar resolutions have been also obtained in the V and R bands. Future work will include the development of a new instrument for the 10.4-meter GTC telescope on La Palma.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011
B. Femenía; R. Rebolo; Jorge A. Pérez-Prieto; Sergi R. Hildebrandt; L. Labadie; Antonio Pérez-Garrido; V. J. S. Béjar; Anastasio Díaz-Sánchez; Isidro Villó; Alex Oscoz; Roberto López; Luis Fernando Rodriguez; J. Piqueras
The potential of combining Adaptive Optics (AO) and Lucky Imaging (LI) to achieve high precision astrometry and differential photometry in the optical is investigated by condu cting observations of the close 0: 1 brown dwarf binary GJ569Bab. We took 50000 I-band images with our LI instrument FastCam attached to NAOMI, the 4.2-m William Herschel Telescope (WHT) AO facility. In order to extract the most of the astrometry and photometry of the GJ569Bab system we have resorted to a PSF fitting technique us ing the primary star GJ569A as a suitable PSF reference which exhibits an I-band magnitude of 7: 78�0: 03. The AO+LI observations at WHT were able to resolve the binary system GJ569Bab located at 4: 00 92� 0: 05 from GJ569A. We measure a separation of 98: 4�1: 1 mas and I-band magnitudes of 13: 86�0: 03 and 14: 48�0: 03 and I− J colors of 2.72� 0.08 and 2.83� 0.08 for the Ba and Bb components, respectively. Our study rules out the presence of any other companion to GJ569A down to magnitude I�17 at distances larger than 1 00 . The I− J colors measured are consistent with M8.5-M9 spectral types for the Ba and Bb components. The available dynamical, photometric and spectroscopic data are consistent with a binary system with Ba being slightly (10-20%) more massive than Bb. We obtain new orbital parameters which are in good agreement with those in the literature.
Journal of Astronomical Instrumentation | 2013
A. Calcines; Roberto López; M. Collados
Integral field spectroscopy (IFS) is a technique that allows one to obtain the spectra of all the points of a bidimensional field of view simultaneously. It is being applied to the new generation of the largest night-time telescopes but it is also an innovative technique for solar physics. This paper presents the design of a new image slicer, MuSICa (Multi-Slit Image slicer based on collimator-Camera), for the integral field spectrograph of the 4-m aperture European Solar Telescope (EST). MuSICa is a multi-slit image slicer that decomposes an 80 arcsec2 field of view into slices of 50 μm and reorganizes it into eight slits of 0.05 arcsec width × 200 arcsec length. It is a telecentric system with an optical quality at diffraction limit compatible with the two modes of operation of the spectrograph: spectroscopic and spectro-polarimetric. This paper shows the requirements, technical characteristics and layout of MuSICa, as well as other studied design options.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Craig D. Mackay; Rafael Rebolo-López; Bruno Femenía Castellá; Jonathan Crass; David L. King; Lucas Labadie; Peter Aisher; Antonio Pérez Garrido; Marc Balcells; Anastasio Díaz-Sánchez; J. J. Fuensalida; Roberto López; Alejandro Oscoz; Jorge A. Pérez Prieto; Luis Fernando Rodríguez-Ramos; Isidro Villó
The highest resolution images ever taken in the visible were obtained by combining Lucky Imaging and low order adaptive optics. This paper describes a new instrument to be deployed on the WHT 4.2m and GTC 10.4 m telescopes on La Palma, with particular emphasis on the optical design and the expected system performance. A new design of low order wavefront sensor using photon counting CCD detectors and multi-plane curvature wavefront sensor will allow dramatically fainter reference stars to be used, allowing virtually full sky coverage with a natural guide star. This paper also describes a significant improvements in the efficiency of Lucky Imaging, important advances in wavefront reconstruction with curvature sensors and the results of simulations and sensitivity limits. With a 2 x 2 array of 1024 x 1024 photon counting EMCCDs, AOLI is likely to be the first of the new class of high sensitivity, near diffraction limited imaging systems giving higher resolution in the visible from the ground than hitherto been possible from space.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Jonathan Crass; Peter Aisher; Bruno Femenia; David L. King; Craig D. Mackay; Rafael Rebolo-López; Lucas Labadie; Antonio Pérez Garrido; Marc Balcells; Anastasio Díaz Sánchez; J. J. Fuensalida; Roberto López; Alejandro Oscoz; Jorge A. Pérez Prieto; Luis Fernando Rodríguez-Ramos; Isidro Villó
The Adaptive Optics Lucky Imager (AOLI) is a new instrument under development to demonstrate near diffraction limited imaging in the visible on large ground-based telescopes. We present the adaptive optics system being designed for the instrument comprising a large stroke deformable mirror, fixed component non-linear curvature wavefront sensor and photon-counting EMCCD detectors. We describe the optical design of the wavefront sensor where two photoncounting CCDs provide a total of four reference images. Simulations of the optical characteristics of the system are discussed, with their relevance to low and high order AO systems. The development and optimisation of high-speed wavefront reconstruction algorithms are presented. Finally we discuss the results of simulations to demonstrate the sensitivity of the system.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012
Anastasio Díaz-Sánchez; Antonio Pérez-Garrido; Isidro Villó; R. Rebolo; Jorge A. Pérez-Prieto; Alejandro Oscoz; S. R. Hildebrandt; Roberto López; Luis Rodríguez
We present high-resolution I-band imaging of the core of the globular cluster M15 obtained at the 2.5-m Nordic Optical Telescope with FastCam, a low readout noise L3CCD-based instrument. Short exposure times (30ms) were used to record 200 000 images (512×512 pixels each) over a period of 2 h and 43 min. The lucky imaging technique was then applied to generate a final image of the cluster centre with full width at half-maximum ∼0.1 arcsec and 13 × 13 arcsec^2 field of view. We obtained a catalogue of objects in this region with a limiting magnitude of I = 19.5. I-band photometry and astrometry are reported for 1181 stars. This is the deepest I-band observation of the M15 core at this spatial resolution. Simulations show that crowding is limiting the completeness of the catalogue. At shorter wavelengths, a similar number of objects have been reported using Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/Wide Field Planetary Camera observations of the same field. The cross-match with the available HST catalogues allowed us to produce colour–magnitude diagrams where we identify new blue straggler star candidates and previously known stars of this class.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
Carlos Colodro-Conde; S. Velasco; J. J. Fernández-Valdivia; Roberto López; Alejandro Oscoz; R. Rebolo; Bruno Femenia; David L. King; Lucas Labadie; Craig D. Mackay; Balaji Muthusubramanian; A. Pérez Garrido; Marta Puga; Gustavo Rodríguez-Coira; Luis Fernando Rodríguez-Ramos; J. M. Rodríguez-Ramos; R. Toledo-Moreo; I. Villó-Pérez
This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy under the projects AYA2011-29024, ESP2014-56869-C2-2-P, ESP2015-69020-C2-2-R and DPI2015-66458-C2-2-R, by project 15345/PI/10 from the Fundacion Seneca, by the Spanish Ministry of Education under the grant FPU12/05573, by project ST/K002368/1 from the Science and Technology Facilities Council and by ERDF funds from the European Commission. The results presented in this paper are based on observations made with the William Herschel Telescope operated on the island of La Palma by the Isaac Newton Group in the Spanish Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos of the Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias. Special thanks go to Lara Monteagudo and Marcos Pellejero for their timely contributions.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
Lucas Labadie; R. Rebolo; Bruno Femenia; Isidro Villó; Anastasio Díaz-Sánchez; Alejandro Oscoz; Roberto López; Jorge A. Pérez-Prieto; Antonio Pérez-Garrido; Sergi R. Hildebrandt; Victor Béjar-Sánchez; Juan José Piqueras; Luis Fernando Rodriguez
In this paper, we present an original observational approach, which combines, for the first time, traditional speckle imaging with image post-processing to obtain in the optical domain diffraction-limited images with high contrast (10-5) within 0.5 to 2 arcseconds around a bright star. The post-processing step is based on wavelet filtering an has analogy with edge enhancement and high-pass filtering. Our I-band on-sky results with the 2.5-m Nordic Telescope (NOT) and the lucky imaging instrument FASTCAM show that we are able to detect L-type brown dwarf companions around a solar-type star with a contrast ▵I~12 at 2 and with no use of any coronographic capability, which greatly simplifies the instrumental and hardware approach. This object has been detected from the ground in J and H bands so far only with AO-assisted 8-10 m class telescopes (Gemini, Keck), although more recently detected with small-class telescopes in the K band. Discussing the advantage and disadvantage of the optical regime for the detection of faint intrinsic fluxes close to bright stars, we develop some perspectives for other fields, including the study of dense cores in globular clusters. To the best of our knowledge this is the first time that high contrast considerations are included in optical speckle imaging approach.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Craig D. Mackay; R. Rebolo; Jonathan Crass; David L. King; Lucas Labadie; Víctor González Escalera; Marta Puga; Antonio Pérez Garrido; Roberto López; Alejanrdo Oscoz; Jorge A. Pérez-Prieto; Luis Fernando Rodríguez-Ramos; S. Velasco; Isidro Villó
Lucky Imaging combined with a low order adaptive optics system has given the highest resolution images ever taken in the visible or near infrared of faint astronomical objects. This paper describes a new instrument that has already been deployed on the WHT 4.2m telescope on La Palma, with particular emphasis on the optical design and the predicted system performance. A new design of low order wavefront sensor using photon counting CCD detectors and multi-plane curvature wavefront sensor will allow virtually full sky coverage with faint natural guide stars. With a 2 x 2 array of 1024 x 1024 photon counting EMCCDs, AOLI is the first of the new class of high sensitivity, near diffraction limited imaging systems giving higher resolution in the visible from the ground than hitherto been possible from space.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
A. Calcines; Roberto López; M. Collados; N. Vega Reyes
Integral Field Spectroscopy is an innovative technique that is being implemented in the state-of-the-art instruments of the largest night-time telescopes, however, it is still a novelty for solar instrumentation. A new concept of image slicer, called MuSICa (Multi-Slit Image slicer based on collimator-Camera), has been designed for the integral field spectrograph of the 4-m European Solar Telescope. This communication presents an image slicer prototype of MuSICa for GRIS, the spectrograph of the 1.5-m GREGOR solar telescope located at the Observatory of El Teide. MuSICa at GRIS reorganizes a 2-D field of view of 24.5 arcsec into a slit of 0.367 arcsec width by 66.76 arcsec length distributed horizontally. It will operate together with the TIP-II polarimeter to offer high resolution integral field spectropolarimetry. It will also have a bidimensional field of view scanning system to cover a field of view up to 1 by 1 arcmin.