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Featured researches published by S. Rabien.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

GRAVITY: getting to the event horizon of Sgr A*

F. Eisenhauer; G. Perrin; Wolfgang Brandner; C. Straubmeier; A. Richichi; S. Gillessen; J.-P. Berger; Stefan Hippler; A. Eckart; M. Schöller; S. Rabien; F. Cassaing; Rainer Lenzen; M. Thiel; Y. Clénet; J. Ramos; S. Kellner; Pierre Fedou; Harald Baumeister; R. Hofmann; Eric Gendron; Armin Boehm; H. Bartko; X. Haubois; R. Klein; K. Dodds-Eden; K. Houairi; Felix Hormuth; A. Gräter; L. Jocou

We present the second-generation VLTI instrument GRAVITY, which currently is in the preliminary design phase. GRAVITY is specifically designed to observe highly relativistic motions of matter close to the event horizon of Sgr A*, the massive black hole at center of the Milky Way. We have identified the key design features needed to achieve this goal and present the resulting instrument concept. It includes an integrated optics, 4-telescope, dual feed beam combiner operated in a cryogenic vessel; near infrared wavefront sensing adaptive optics; fringe tracking on secondary sources within the field of view of the VLTI and a novel metrology concept. Simulations show that the planned design matches the scientific needs; in particular that 10µas astrometry is feasible for a source with a magnitude of K=15 like Sgr A*, given the availability of suitable phase reference sources.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

GRAVITY: a four-telescope beam combiner instrument for the VLTI

S. Gillessen; F. Eisenhauer; G. Perrin; Wolfgang Brandner; C. Straubmeier; K. Perraut; A. Amorim; M. Schöller; Constanza Araujo-Hauck; H. Bartko; Harald Baumeister; Jean-Philippe Berger; Pedro Carvas; F. Cassaing; F. Chapron; E. Choquet; Y. Clénet; C. Collin; A. Eckart; Pierre Fedou; Sebastian Fischer; Eric Gendron; R. Genzel; Philippe B. Gitton; F. Gonte; A. Gräter; P. Haguenauer; M. Haug; X. Haubois; T. Henning

GRAVITY is an adaptive optics assisted Beam Combiner for the second generation VLTI instrumentation. The instrument will provide high-precision narrow-angle astrometry and phase-referenced interferometric imaging in the astronomical K-band for faint objects. We describe the wide range of science that will be tackled with this instrument, highlighting the unique capabilities of the VLTI in combination with GRAVITY. The most prominent goal is to observe highly relativistic motions of matter close to the event horizon of Sgr A*, the massive black hole at center of the Milky Way. We present the preliminary design that fulfils the requirements that follow from the key science drivers: It includes an integrated optics, 4-telescope, dual feed beam combiner operated in a cryogenic vessel; near-infrared wavefrontsensing adaptive optics; fringe-tracking on secondary sources within the field of view of the VLTI and a novel metrology concept. Simulations show that 10 μas astrometry within few minutes is feasible for a source with a magnitude of mK = 15 like Sgr A*, given the availability of suitable phase reference sources (mK = 10). Using the same setup, imaging of mK = 18 stellar sources in the interferometric field of view is possible, assuming a full night of observations and the corresponding UV coverage of the VLTI.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

ARGOS - The laser guide star system for the LBT

S. Rabien; N. Ageorges; L. Barl; Udo Beckmann; T. Blümchen; Marco Bonaglia; J. Borelli; Joar Brynnel; Lorenzo Busoni; Luca Carbonaro; R. Davies; M. Deysenroth; O. Durney; M. Elberich; Simone Esposito; Victor Gasho; Wolfgang Gässler; Hans Gemperlein; R. Genzel; Richard F. Green; M. Haug; M. L. Hart; P. Hubbard; S. Kanneganti; Elena Masciadri; J. Noenickx; Gilles Orban de Xivry; D. Peter; A. Quirrenbach; M. Rademacher

ARGOS is the Laser Guide Star adaptive optics system for the Large Binocular Telescope. Aiming for a wide field adaptive optics correction, ARGOS will equip both sides of LBT with a multi laser beacon system and corresponding wavefront sensors, driving LBTs adaptive secondary mirrors. Utilizing high power pulsed green lasers the artificial beacons are generated via Rayleigh scattering in earths atmosphere. ARGOS will project a set of three guide stars above each of LBTs mirrors in a wide constellation. The returning scattered light, sensitive particular to the turbulence close to ground, is detected in a gated wavefront sensor system. Measuring and correcting the ground layers of the optical distortions enables ARGOS to achieve a correction over a very wide field of view. Taking advantage of this wide field correction, the science that can be done with the multi object spectrographs LUCIFER will be boosted by higher spatial resolution and strongly enhanced flux for spectroscopy. Apart from the wide field correction ARGOS delivers in its ground layer mode, we foresee a diffraction limited operation with a hybrid Sodium laser Rayleigh beacon combination.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

GRAVITY - the adaptive optics assisted, two object beam combiner for the VLTI

S. Gillessen; G. Perin; Wolfgang Brandner; C. Straubmeier; F. Eisenhauer; S. Rabien; A. Eckart; P. Léna; R. Genzel; T. Paumard; Stefan Hippler

We present the adaptive optics assisted, near-infrared VLTI instrument - GRAVITY - for precision narrow-angle astrometry and interferometric phase referenced imaging of faint objects. Precision astrometry and phase-referenced interferometric imaging will realize the most advanced vision of optical/infrared interferometry with the VLT. Our most ambitious science goal is to study motions within a few times the event horizon size of the Galactic Center massive black hole and to test General Relativity in its strong field limit. We define the science reference cases for GRAVITY and derive the top level requirements for GRAVITY. The installation of the instrument at the VLTI is planned for 2012.


Experimental Astronomy | 2000

Short timescale variability of the mesospheric sodium layer

C. O'Sullivan; R. M. Redfern; N. Ageorges; H.-C. Holstenberg; W. Hackenberg; Thomas Ott; S. Rabien; R. Davies; A. Eckart

In this article we investigate the short-term characteristics of the sodium layer and their implications for laser guide star systems. We report measurements of sodium density andcentroid-height variations on timescales of 100 ms upwards. Significant centroid-height variations on short timescales may necessitate frequent refocussing of the beam and wavefront sensor system.We present results from observations of the mesospheric sodium layer taken at the Max Planck observatory in Calar Alto, Spain in September 1997 and August 1998. We describe our experiment which uses the resonant optical backscatter of 589.2 nm laser light from the upper atmosphere as a measure of sodium abundance.Short-term variations are dominated by the formation of dense sporadic layers in the normal sodium layer. Measurements were made on 3 nights in 1997 and on 2 nights in 1998. Somewhat unexpectedly for a mid-latitude site, sporadic sodium layers were seen on 4 of these 5 nights. One of the sporadic layers was observed for its duration. The 2 km wide layer reached a maximum intensity of approximately two and a half times that of the background layer and could be distinguished from the background for over five hours. Centroid height variations of up to 400 m were observed on timescales of 1–2 min. In 1998 we were sensitive to variations of 5% or more in total sodium abundance on timescales of 100 ms upwards. We found no evidencefor variations of this level on these short timescales.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

Test performance of the PARSEC laser system

S. Rabien; Richard Davies; Thomas Ott; Jianlang Li; Roberto Abuter; Stefan Kellner; U. Neumann

The PARSEC laser system is designed for the VLT Laser Guide Star Facility to deliver a high power cw laser beam at 589nm, in order to create an artificial guide star in the mesospheric Sodium layer. The laser consists of a resonant, dye based power amplifier which is injection seeded with 589nm, single frequency radiation from a master oscillator. We report on the performance of the system both during the European Acceptance tests, and that which has been achieved in the laboratory. The maximum power we have obtained amounts to 20W cw laser light in a single mode and a single frequency at 589nm. With a beam quality of M2 of 1.05-1.15 and a long term stability without manual intervention, the laser suits all the demands for operation at the VLT.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014

Reaching micro-arcsecond astrometry with long baseline optical interferometry Application to the GRAVITY instrument

Sylvestre Lacour; F. Eisenhauer; S. Gillessen; O. Pfuhl; Julien Woillez; Henri Bonnet; G. Perrin; B. Lazareff; S. Rabien; V. Lapeyrere; Y. Clénet; P. Kervella; Y. Kok

Context. A basic principle of long baseline interferometry is that an optical path difference (OPD) directly translates into an astrometric measurement. In the simplest case, the OPD is equal to the scalar product between the vector that links the two telescopes and the normalized vector pointing toward the star. However, in some circumstances, too simple an interpretation of this scalar product leads to seemingly conflicting results, called here “the baseline paradox”. Aims. For micro-arcsecond accuracy astrometry, we have to model the metrology measurement in full. It involves a complex system subject to many optical effects: from pure baseline errors to static, quasi-static, and high-order optical aberrations. The goal of this paper is to present the strategy used by the “General Relativity Analysis via VLT InTerferometrY” instrument (GRAVITY) to minimize the biases introduced by these defects. Methods. It is possible to give an analytical formula for how the baselines and tip-tilt errors affect the astrometric measurement. This formula depends on the limit points of three type of baselines: the wide-angle baseline, the narrow-angle baseline, and the imaging baseline. We also numerically include non-common path, higher order aberrations, whose amplitudes were measured during technical time at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI). We end by simulating the influence of high-order, common-path aberrations due to atmospheric residuals calculated from a Monte-Carlo simulation tool for adaptive optics (AO) systems. Results. The result of this work is an error budget of the biases caused by the multiple optical imperfections, including optical dispersion. We show that the beam stabilization through both focal and pupil tracking is crucial to the GRAVITY system. Assuming the instrument pupil is stabilized at a 4 cm level on M1 and a field tracking below 0.2 λ/D, we show that GRAVITY will be able to reach its objective of 10 μas accuracy.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

LUCI in the sky: performance and lessons learned in the first two years of near-infrared multi-object spectroscopy at the LBT

Peter Buschkamp; Walter Seifert; Kai Lars Polsterer; R. Hofmann; Hans Gemperlein; Reinhard Lederer; Michael Lehmitz; Vianak Naranjo; N. Ageorges; J. Kurk; F. Eisenhauer; S. Rabien; Mathias Honsberg; R. Genzel

LUCI (former LUCIFER) is the full cryogenic near-infrared multi-object spectrograph and imager at the LBT. It presently allows for seeing limited imaging and multi-object spectroscopy at R~2000-4000 in a 4x4arcmin2 FOV from 0.9 to 2.5 micron. We report on the instrument performance and the lessons learned during the first two years on sky from a technical and operational point of view. We present the upcoming detector upgrade to Hawaii-2 RG arrays and the operating modes to utilize the binocular mode, the LBT facility AO system for diffraction limited imaging as well as to use the wide-field AO correction afforded by the multi-laser GLAO System ARGOS in multi-object spectroscopy.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

First light of the ESO laser guide star facility

D. Bonaccini Calia; Eric Allaert; J. L. Alvarez; C. Araujo Hauck; Gerardo Avila; Eduardo Bendek; Bernard Buzzoni; Mauro Comin; Martin J. Cullum; R. Davies; Martin Dimmler; I. Guidolin; W. Hackenberg; Stefan Hippler; S. Kellner; A. van Kesteren; Franz Koch; U. Neumann; T. Ott; Dan Popovic; Fernando Pedichini; Marco Quattri; J. Quentin; S. Rabien; Armin Silber; Mario Tapia

Two teams of scientists and engineers at Max Planck Institut fuer Extraterrestrische Physik and at the European Southern Observatory have joined forces to design, build and install the Laser Guide Star Facility for the VLT. The Laser Guide Star Facility has now been completed and installed on the VLT Yepun telescope at Cerro Paranal. In this paper we report on the first light and first results from the Commissioning of the LGSF.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

The VLT laser guide star facility

Domenico Bonaccini; Eric Allaert; C. Araujo; Enzo Brunetto; Bernard Buzzoni; Mauro Comin; Martin J. Cullum; R. Davies; C. Dichirico; Philippe Dierickx; Martin Dimmler; Michel Duchateau; C. Egedal; W. Hackenberg; Stefan Hippler; S. Kellner; A. van Kesteren; Franz Koch; U. Neumann; T. Ott; Marco Quattri; J. Quentin; S. Rabien; Roberto Tamai; Mario Tapia; M. Tarenghi

We report on the ongoing VLT Laser Guide Star Facility project, which will allow the ESO UT4 telescope to produce an artificial reference star for the Adaptive Optics systems NAOS-CONICA and SINFONI. A custom developed dye laser producing >10W CW at 589nm is installed on-board of the UT4 telescope, then relayed by means of a single mode optical fiber behind the secondary mirror, where a 500mm diameter lightweight, f/1 launch telescope is projecting the laser beam at 90 km altitude. We described the design tradeoffs and provide some details of the chosen subsystems. This paper is an update including subsystems results, to be read together with our previous paper on LGSF design description.

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W. Hackenberg

European Southern Observatory

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