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Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

CRIRES+: a cross-dispersed high-resolution infrared spectrograph for the ESO VLT

Roman Follert; Reinhold J. Dorn; Ernesto Oliva; J.-L. Lizon; A. Hatzes; N. Piskunov; Ansgar Reiners; Ulf Seemann; Eric Stempels; Ulrike Heiter; Thomas Marquart; M. Lockhart; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; Tom Löwinger; Dietrich Baade; J. Grunhut; Paul Bristow; Barbara Klein; Yves Jung; Derek Ives; Florian Kerber; Eszter Pozna; Jerome Paufique; Hans-Ulrich Kaeufl; L. Origlia; E. Valenti; Domingo Gojak; Michael Hilker; Luca Pasquini; Alain Smette

High-resolution infrared spectroscopy plays an important role in astrophysics from the search for exoplanets to cosmology. Yet, many existing infrared spectrographs are limited by a rather small simultaneous wavelength coverage. The AO assisted CRIRES instrument, installed at the ESO VLT on Paranal, is one of the few IR (0.92-5.2 μm) highresolution spectrographs in operation since 2006. However it has a limitation that hampers its efficient use: the wavelength range covered in a single exposure is limited to ~15 nanometers. The CRIRES Upgrade project (CRIRES+) will transform CRIRES into a cross-dispersed spectrograph and will also add new capabilities. By introducing crossdispersion elements the simultaneously covered wavelength range will be increased by at least a factor of 10 with respect to the present configuration, while the operational wavelength range will be preserved. For advanced wavelength calibration, new custom made absorption gas cells and etalons will be added. A spectro-polarimetric unit will allow one for the first time to record circularly polarized spectra at the highest spectral resolution. This will be all supported by a new data reduction software which will allow the community to take full advantage of the new capabilities of CRIRES+.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

The "+" for CRIRES: enabling better science at infrared wavelength and high spectral resolution at the ESO VLT

Reinhold J. Dorn; Roman Follert; Paul Bristow; Claudio Cumani; Siegfried Eschbaumer; J. Grunhut; Andreas Haimerl; A. Hatzes; Ulrike Heiter; Renate Hinterschuster; Derek Ives; Yves Jung; Florian Kerber; Barbara Klein; Alexis Lavaila; Jean Louis Lizon; Tom Löwinger; Ignacio Molina-Conde; Belinda Nicholson; Thomas Marquart; Ernesto Oliva; L. Origlia; Luca Pasquini; Jerome Paufique; Nikolai Piskunov; Ansgar Reiners; Ulf Seemann; Jörg Stegmeier; Eric Stempels; Sebastien Tordo

The adaptive optics (AO) assisted CRIRES instrument is an IR (0.92 - 5.2 μm) high-resolution spectrograph was in operation from 2006 to 2014 at the Very Large Telescope (VLT) observatory. CRIRES was a unique instrument, accessing a parameter space (wavelength range and spectral resolution) up to now largely uncharted. It consisted of a single-order spectrograph providing long-slit (40 arcsecond) spectroscopy with a resolving power up to R=100 000. However the setup was limited to a narrow, single-shot, spectral range of about 1/70 of the central wavelength, resulting in low observing efficiency for many scientific programmes requiring a broad spectral coverage. The CRIRES upgrade project, CRIRES+, transforms this VLT instrument into a cross-dispersed spectrograph to increase the simultaneously covered wavelength range by a factor of ten. A new and larger detector focal plane array of three Hawaii 2RG detectors with 5.3 μm cut-off wavelength will replace the existing detectors. For advanced wavelength calibration, custom-made absorption gas cells and an etalon system will be added. A spectro-polarimetric unit will allow the recording of circular and linear polarized spectra. This upgrade will be supported by dedicated data reduction software allowing the community to take full advantage of the new capabilities offered by CRIRES+. CRIRES+ has now entered its assembly and integration phase and will return with all new capabilities by the beginning of 2018 to the Very Large Telescope in Chile. This article will provide the reader with an update of the current status of the instrument as well as the remaining steps until final installation at the Paranal Observatory.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Concept and optical design of the cross-disperser module for CRIRES+

Ernesto Oliva; A. Tozzi; Debora Ferruzzi; L. Origlia; A. Hatzes; Roman Follert; Tom Löwinger; N. Piskunov; Ulrike Heiter; M. Lockhart; Thomas Marquart; Eric Stempels; Ansgar Reiners; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; Ulf Seemann; Reinhold J. Dorn; Paul Bristow; Dietrich Baade; B. Delabre; Domingo Gojak; J. Grunhut; Barbara Klein; Michael Hilker; Derek Ives; Yves Jung; Hans-Ulrich Kaeufl; Florian Kerber; J.-L. Lizon; Luca Pasquini; Jerome Paufique

CRIRES, the ESO high resolution infrared spectrometer, is a unique instrument which allows astronomers to access a parameter space which up to now was largely uncharted. In its current setup, it consists of a single-order spectrograph providing long-slit, single-order spectroscopy with resolving power up to R=100,000 over a quite narrow spectral range. This has resulted in sub-optimal efficiency and use of telescope time for all the scientific programs requiring broad spectral coverage of compact objects (e.g. chemical abundances of stars and intergalactic medium, search and characterization of extra-solar planets). To overcome these limitations, a consortium was set-up for upgrading CRIRES to a cross-dispersed spectrometer, called CRIRES+. This paper presents the updated optical design of the cross-dispersion module for CRIRES+. This new module can be mounted in place of the current pre-disperser unit. The new system yields a factor of >10 increase in simultaneous spectral coverage and maintains a quite long slit (10”), ideal for observations of extended sources and for precise sky-background subtraction.


Optical Engineering | 2013

LINC-NIRVANA for the large binocular telescope: setting up the world’s largest near infrared binoculars for astronomy

Ralph Hofferbert; Harald Baumeister; Thomas Bertram; Jürgen Berwein; Peter Bizenberger; A. Böhm; Michael C. Böhm; J. Borelli; Matthieu Brangier; Florian Briegel; Albert R. Conrad; Fulvio De Bonis; Roman Follert; T. M. Herbst; Armin Huber; Frank Kittmann; M. Kürster; W. Laun; Ulrich Mall; Daniel Meschke; Lars Mohr; Vianak Naranjo; Aleksei Pavlov; Jörg-Uwe Pott; Hans-Walter Rix; Ralf-Rainer Rohloff; E. Schinnerer; Clemens Storz; Jan Trowitzsch; Zhaojun Yan

LINC-NIRVANA (LN) is the near-infrared, Fizeau-type imaging interferometer for the large binocular telescope (LBT) on Mt. Graham, Arizona (elevation of 3267 m). The instrument is currently being built by a consortium of German and Italian institutes under the leadership of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany. It will combine the radiation from both 8.4 m primary mirrors of LBT in such a way that the sensitivity of a 11.9 m telescope and the spatial resolution of a 22.8 m telescope will be obtained within a 10.5×10.5 arcsec 2 scientific field of view. Interferometric fringes of the combined beams are tracked in an oval field with diameters of 1 and 1.5 arcmin. In addition, both incoming beams are individually corrected by LN’s multiconjugate adaptive optics system to reduce atmospheric image distortion over a circular field of up to 6 arcmin in diameter. A comprehensive technical overview of the instrument is presented, comprising the detailed design of LN’s four major systems for interferometric imaging and fringe tracking, both in the near infrared range of 1 to 2.4 μm, as well as atmospheric turbulence correction at two altitudes, both in the visible range of 0.6 to 0.9 μm. The resulting performance capabilities and a short outlook of some of the major science goals will be presented. In addition, the roadmap for the related assembly, integration, and verification process are discussed. To avoid late interface-related risks, strategies for early hardware as well as software interactions with the telescope have been elaborated. The goal is to ship LN to the LBT in 2014.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Characterizing the cross dispersion reflection gratings of CRIRES

Roman Follert; D. R. Taubert; J. Hollandt; Christian Monte; Ernesto Oliva; Ulf Seemann; Tom Löwinger; Heiko Anwand-Heerwart; C. Schmidt; Reinhold J. Dorn; Paul Bristow; A. Hatzes; Ansgar Reiners; Nikolai Piskunov; Ulrike Heiter; Eric Stempels; Thomas Marquart; Alexis Lavail; Claudio Cumani; J. Grunhut; Andreas Haimerl; Renate Hinterschuster; Derek Ives; Yves Jung; Florian Kerber; Barbara Klein; Jean Louis Lizon; Ignacio Molina-Conde; Belinda Nicholson; L. Origlia

The CRIRES+ project attempts to upgrade the CRIRES instrument into a cross dispersed Echelle spectrograph with a simultaneous recording of 8-10 diffraction orders. In order to transform the CRIRES spectrograph into a cross-dispersing instrument, a set of six reflection gratings, each one optimized for one of the wavelength bands CRIRES+ will operate in (YJHKLM), will be used as cross dispersion elements in CRIRES+. Due to the upgrade nature of the project, the choice of gratings depends on the fixed geometry of the instrument. Thus, custom made gratings would be required to achieve the ambitious design goals. Custom made gratings have the disadvantage, though, that they come at an extraordinary price and with lead times of more than 12 months. To mitigate this, a set of off-the-shelf gratings was obtained which had grating parameters very close to the ones being identified as optimal. To ensure that the rigorous specifications for CRIRES+ will be fulfilled, the CRIRES+ team started a collaboration with the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt Berlin (PTB) to characterize gratings underconditions similar to the operating conditions in CRIRES+ (angle of incidence, wavelength range). The respective test setup was designed in collaboration between PTB and the CRIRES+ consortium. The PTB provided optical radiation sources and calibrated detectors for each wavelength range. With this setup, it is possible to measure the absolute efficiency of the gratings both wavelength dependent and polarization state dependent in a wavelength range from 0.9 μm to 6 μm.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Novel infrared polarimeter for the ESO CRIRES+ instrument

Matthew Lockhart; Nikolai Piskunov; Eric Stempels; Michael J. Escuti; Ernesto Oliva; H. U. Käufl; Ulrike Heiter; Thomas Marquart; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; Dietrich Baade; Paul Bristow; Reinhold J. Dorn; Roman Follert; Domingo Gojak; J. Grunhut; A. Hatzes; Michael Hilker; Derek Ives; Yves Jung; Florian Kerber; Barbara Klein; Jean-Louis Lizon; Tom Löwinger; L. Origlia; Luca Pasquini; Jerome Paufique; Eszter Pozna; Ansgar Reiners; Ulf Seemann; Alain Smette

The CRIRES infrared spectrograph at the European Southern Observatory (ESO) Very Large Telescope (VLT) facility will soon receive an upgrade. This upgrade will include the addition of a module for performing highresolution spectropolarimetry. The polarimetry module will incorporate a novel infrared beamsplitter based on polarization gratings (PGs). The beamsplitter produces a pair of infrared output beams, with opposite circular polarizations, which are then fed into the spectrograph. Visible light passes through the module virtually unaltered and is then available for use by the CRIRES adaptive optics system. We present the design of the polarimetry module and measurements of PG behavior in the 1 to 2.7 μm wavelength range.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Opto-mechanical design of a new Cross Dispersion Unit for the CRIRES+ high resolution spectrograph for the VLT

Jean Louis Lizon; Barbara Klein; Ernesto Oliva; Tom Löwinger; Guillem Anglada Escude; Dietrich Baade; Paul Bristow; Reinhold J. Dorn; Roman Follert; J. Grunhut; A. Hatzes; Ulrike Heiter; Derek Ives; Yves Jung; Florian Kerber; Matt Lockhart; Thomas Marquart; L. Origlia; Luca Pasquini; Jerome Paufique; N. Piskunov; Eszter Pozna; Ansgar Reiners; Alain Smette; Jonathan Smoker; Ulf Seemann; Eric Stempels; E. Valenti

CRIRES is one of the few IR (0.92-5.2 μm) high-resolution spectrographs in operation at the VLT since 2006. Despite good performance it suffers a limitation that significantly hampers its ability: a small spectral coverage per exposure. The CRIRES upgrade (CRIRES+) proposes to transform CRIRES into a cross-dispersed spectrograph while maintaining the high resolution (100000) and increasing the wavelength coverage by a factor 10 compared to the current capabilities. A major part of the upgrade is the exchange of the actual cryogenic pre-disperser module by a new cross disperser unit. In addition to a completely new optical design, a number of important changes are required on key components and functions like the slit unit and detectors units. We will outline the design of these new units fitting inside a predefined and restricted space. The mechanical design of the new functions including a description and analysis will be presented. Finally we will present the strategy for the implementation of the changes.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Wavelength calibration from 1-5μm for the CRIRES+ high-resolution spectrograph at the VLT

Ulf Seemann; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; Dietrich Baade; Paul Bristow; Reinhold J. Dorn; Roman Follert; Domingo Gojak; J. Grunhut; A. Hatzes; Ulrike Heiter; Derek Ives; P. Jeep; Yves Jung; H. U. Käufl; Florian Kerber; Barbara Klein; J.-L. Lizon; M. Lockhart; Tom Löwinger; Thomas Marquart; Ernesto Oliva; Jerome Paufique; N. Piskunov; Eszter Pozna; Ansgar Reiners; Alain Smette; Jonathan Smoker; Eric Stempels; E. Valenti

CRIRES at the VLT is one of the few adaptive optics enabled instruments that offer a resolving power of 105 from 1 − 5 μm. An instrument upgrade (CRIRES+) is proposed to implement cross-dispersion capabilities, spectro-polarimetry modes, a new detector mosaic, and a new gas absorption cell. CRIRES+ will boost the simultaneous wavelength coverage of the current instrument (~ γ/70 in a single-order) by a factor of 10 in the cross-dispersed configuration, while still retaining a ~> 10 arcsec slit suitable for long-slit spectroscopy. CRIRES+ dramatically enhances the instrument’s observing efficiency, and opens new scientific opportunities. These include high-precision radial-velocity studies on the 3 m/s level to characterize extra-solar planets and their athmospheres, which demand for specialized, highly accurate wavelength calibration techniques. In this paper, we present a newly developed absorption gas-cell to enable high-precision wavelength calibration for CRIRES+. We also discuss the strategies and developments to cover the full operational spectral range (1 − 5 μµm), employing cathode emission lamps, Fabry-Perot etalons, and absorption gas-cells.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

The Atmospheric piston simulator as an integral part of the calibration unit of LINC - NIRVANA

Roman Follert; T. M. Herbst; Peter Bizenberger; F. DeBonis

The atmospheric piston simulator is an integral part of the calibration unit of LINC-NIRVANA, the Fizeau interferometric imager for the Large Binocular Telescope. The calibration unit will be necessary to align and set up the different opto - mechanical subsystems of the instrument. It will assist in (1) the alignment of the optics via reference fibers; (2) establishing zero optical path difference using a balanced fiber splitter; (3) flat fielding of the detectors with an integrating sphere; (4) correction of the non-common path aberrations using a fiber-based phase diversity source; and (5) calibration of the adaptive optics with a rotating reference fiber plate. Substantial testing and verification of the fringe tracker under as realistic as possible conditions in the lab is desirable, since the performance of the fringe tracker will ultimately determine the high angular resolution imaging capability of LINC-NIRVANA as a whole. We are therefore also constructing an atmospheric piston simulator working in the J and H photometric bands. As with many of the other calibration unit sub-systems, our design concept is mainly fiber based. Opto - electronic phase modulators will be used to introduce the piston sequences. The control system of the piston modulators will allow for easy implementation of different vibration power spectra. This will enable us to test and demonstrate the capabilities of the fringe tracker under realistic conditions.


Optical and Infrared Interferometry and Imaging VI | 2018

Very accurate cryogenic mechanisms for CRIRES

Jean-Louis Lizon; Barbara Klein; Ignacio Molina-Conde; Reinhold J. Dorn; Ulf Seemann; Ernesto Oliva; Artie P. Hatzes; Roman Follert; Ansgar Reiners; Nikolai Pistunov; Thomas Marquart; Ulrike Heiter; Eric Stempels; Paul Bristow; Derek Ives; Yves Jung; Jerome Paufique; Elena Valenti; Luca Pasquini; Guillem Anglada-Escudé; Matt Lockhart; L. Origlia; Alain Smette; Jonathan Smoker

After 5 years of operation on the VLT, a large upgrade of CRIRES (the ESO Cryogenic InfraRed Echelle Spectrograph) was decided mainly in order to increase the efficiency. Using a cross dispersion design allows better wavelength coverage per exposure. This means a complete re-design of the cryogenic pre-optic which were including a predispersion stage with a large prism as dispersive element. The new design requires a move of the entrance slit and associated decker toward the first intermediate focal plane right behind the window. Implement 2 functions with high positioning accuracy in a pre-defined and limited space was a real challenge. The design and the test results recorded in the ESO Cryogenic Test Facility are reported in this paper. The second critical function is the grating wheel which positions the 6 cross disperser gratings into the beam. The paper describes the design of the mechanism which includes a detente system in order to guaranty the 5 arc sec positioning reproducibility requested. The design includes also feedback system, based on switches, in order to ensure that the right grating is in position before starting a long exposure. The paper reports on the tests carried out at cryogenic temperature at the sub-system level. It also includes early performances recorded in the instrument along the first phases of the system test.

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Ulf Seemann

University of Göttingen

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Ansgar Reiners

University of Göttingen

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Reinhold J. Dorn

European Southern Observatory

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Barbara Klein

European Southern Observatory

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Derek Ives

European Southern Observatory

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Yves Jung

European Southern Observatory

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Florian Kerber

European Southern Observatory

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