Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Stephen L. Redman is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Stephen L. Redman.


Optics Express | 2012

Demonstration of on-sky calibration of astronomical spectra using a 25 GHz near-IR laser frequency comb

Gabriel Ycas; Franklyn Quinlan; Scott A. Diddams; Steve Osterman; Suvrath Mahadevan; Stephen L. Redman; Ryan C. Terrien; Lawrence W. Ramsey; Chad F. Bender; Brandon Botzer; Steinn Sigurdsson

We describe and characterize a 25 GHz laser frequency comb based on a cavity-filtered erbium fiber mode-locked laser. The comb provides a uniform array of optical frequencies spanning 1450 nm to 1700 nm, and is stabilized by use of a global positioning system referenced atomic clock. This comb was deployed at the 9.2 m Hobby-Eberly telescope at the McDonald Observatory where it was used as a radial velocity calibration source for the fiber-fed Pathfinder near-infrared spectrograph. Stellar targets were observed in three echelle orders over four nights, and radial velocity precision of ∼10 m/s (∼6 MHz) was achieved from the comb-calibrated spectra.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The habitable-zone planet finder: a stabilized fiber-fed NIR spectrograph for the Hobby-Eberly Telescope

Suvrath Mahadevan; Lawrence W. Ramsey; Chad F. Bender; Ryan C. Terrien; Jason T. Wright; Sam Halverson; Frederick R. Hearty; Matthew J. Nelson; Adam Burton; Stephen L. Redman; Steven Neil Osterman; Scott A. Diddams; James F. Kasting; Michael Endl; Rohit Deshpande

We present the scientific motivation and conceptual design for the recently funded Habitable-zone Planet Finder (HPF), a stabilized fiber-fed near-infrared (NIR) spectrograph for the 10 meter class Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET) that will be capable of discovering low mass planets around M dwarfs. The HPF will cover the NIR Y and J bands to enable precise radial velocities to be obtained on mid M dwarfs, and enable the detection of low mass planets around these stars. The conceptual design is comprised of a cryostat cooled to 200K, a dual fiber-feed with a science and calibration fiber, a gold coated mosaic echelle grating, and a Teledyne Hawaii-2RG (H2RG) *NIR detector with a 1.7μm cutoff. A uranium-neon hollow-cathode lamp is the baseline wavelength calibration source, and we are actively testing laser frequency combs to enable even higher radial velocity precision. We will present the overall instrument system design and integration with the HET, and discuss major system challenges, key choices, and ongoing research and development projects to mitigate risk. We also discuss the ongoing process of target selection for the HPF survey.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

The habitable zone planet finder: a proposed high-resolution NIR spectrograph for the Hobby Eberly Telescope to discover low-mass exoplanets around M dwarfs

Suvrath Mahadevan; Larry Ramsey; Jason T. Wright; Michael Endl; Stephen L. Redman; Chad F. Bender; Arpita Roy; Stephanie G. Zonak; Nathaniel Troupe; Leland G. Engel; Steinn Sigurdsson; Alex Wolszczan; Bo Zhao

The Habitable Zone Planet Finder (HZPF) is a proposed instrument for the 10m class Hobby Eberly telescope that will be capable of discovering low mass planets around M dwarfs. HZPF will be fiber-fed, provide a spectral resolution R~ 50,000 and cover the wavelength range 0.9-1.65μm, the Y, J and H NIR bands where most of the flux is emitted by midlate type M stars, and where most of the radial velocity information is concentrated. Enclosed in a chilled vacuum vessel with active temperature control, fiber scrambling and mechanical agitation, HZPF is designed to achieve a radial velocity precision < 3m/s, with a desire to obtain <1m/s for the brightest targets. This instrument will enable a study of the properties of low mass planets around M dwarfs; discover planets in the habitable zones around these stars, as well serve as an essential radial velocity confirmation tool for astrometric and transit detections around late M dwarfs. Radial velocity observation in the near-infrared (NIR) will also enable a search for close in planets around young active stars, complementing the search space enabled by upcoming high-contrast imaging instruments like GPI, SPHERE and PALM3K. Tests with a prototype Pathfinder instrument have already demonstrated the ability to recover radial velocities at 7-10 m/s precision from integrated sunlight and ~15-20 m/s precision on stellar observations at the HET. These tests have also demonstrated the ability to work in the NIR Y and J bands with an un-cooled instrument. We will also discuss lessons learned about calibration and performance from our tests and how they impact the overall design of the HZPF.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2008

A Pathfinder Instrument for Precision Radial Velocities in the Near-Infrared

Larry Ramsey; J. R. Barnes; Stephen L. Redman; Hugh R. A. Jones; A. Wolszczan; S. Bongiorno; Leland G. Engel; J. S. Jenkins

Original article can be found at : http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/ Copyright Astronomical Society of the Pacific


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Optical fiber modal noise in the 0.8 to 1.5 micron region and implications for near infrared precision radial velocity measurements

Keegan S. McCoy; Lawrence W. Ramsey; Suvrath Mahadevan; Samuel Halverson; Stephen L. Redman

Modal noise in fibers has been shown to limit the signal-to-noise ratio achievable in fiber-coupled, high-resolution spectrographs if it is not mitigated via modal scrambling techniques. Modal noise become significantly more important as the wavelength increases and presents a risk to the new generation of near-infrared precision radial spectrographs under construction or being proposed to search for planets around cool M-dwarf stars, which emit most of their light in the NIR. We present experimental results of tests at Penn State University characterizing modal noise in the far visible out to 1.5 microns and the degree of modal scrambling we obtained using mechanical scramblers. These efforts are part of a risk mitigation effort for the Habitable Zone Planet Finder spectrograph currently under development at Penn State University.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2014

Development of Fiber Fabry-Perot Interferometers as Stable Near-infrared Calibration Sources for High Resolution Spectrographs

Samuel Halverson; Suvrath Mahadevan; Lawrence W. Ramsey; Frederick R. Hearty; John W. Wilson; Jon A. Holtzman; Stephen L. Redman; Gillian Nave; David L. Nidever; Matthew J. Nelson; Nick Venditti; Dmitry Bizyaev; Scott W. Fleming

We discuss the ongoing development of single-mode fiber Fabry-Perot (FFP) Interferometers as precise astrophotonic calibration sources for high precision radial velocity (RV) spectrographs. FFPs are simple, inexpensive, monolithic units that can yield a stable and repeatable output spectrum. An FFP is a unique alternative to a traditional etalon, as the interferometric cavity is made of single-mode fiber rather than an air-gap spacer. This design allows for excellent collimation, high spectral finesse, rigid mechanical stability, insensitivity to vibrations, and no need for vacuum operation. The device we have tested is a commercially available product from Micron Optics.10 Our development path is targeted toward a calibration source for the Habitable-Zone Planet Finder (HPF), a near-infrared spectrograph designed to detect terrestrial-mass planets around low-mass stars, but this reference could also be used in many existing and planned fiber-fed spectrographs as we illustrate using the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) instrument. With precise temperature control of the fiber etalon, we achieve a thermal stability of 100 μK and associated velocity uncertainty of 22 cm s-1. We achieve a precision of ≈2 m s-1 in a single APOGEE fiber over 12 hr using this new photonic reference after removal of systematic correlations. This high precision (close to the expected photon-limited floor) is a testament to both the excellent intrinsic wavelength stability of the fiber interferometer and the stability of the APOGEE instrument design. Overall instrument velocity precision is 80 cm s-1 over 12 hr when averaged over all 300 APOGEE fibers and after removal of known trends and pressure correlations, implying the fiber etalon is intrinsically stable to significantly higher precision.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2014

THE SPECTRUM OF THORIUM FROM 250 nm TO 5500 nm: RITZ WAVELENGTHS AND OPTIMIZED ENERGY LEVELS

Stephen L. Redman; Gillian Nave; Craig J. Sansonetti

We have made precise observations of a thorium-argon hollow cathode lamp emission spectrum in the region between 350 nm and 1175 nm using a high-resolution Fourier transform spectrometer. Our measurements are combined with results from seven previously published thorium line lists to re-optimize the energy levels of neutral, singly, and doubly ionized thorium (Th I, Th II, and Th III). Using the optimized level values, we calculate accurate Ritz wavelengths for 19, 874 thorium lines between 250 nm and 5500 nm (40, 000 cm–1 to 1800 cm–1). We have also found 102 new thorium energy levels. A systematic analysis of previous measurements in light of our new results allows us to identify and propose corrections for systematic errors in Palmer & Engleman and typographical errors and incorrect classifications in Kerber et al. We also found a large scatter with respect to the thorium line list of Lovis & Pepe. We anticipate that our Ritz wavelengths will lead to improved measurement accuracy for current and future spectrographs that make use of thorium-argon or thorium-neon lamps as calibration standards.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

The Pathfinder Testbed: Exploring Techniques for Achieving Precision Radial Velocities in the Near-Infrared

Larry Ramsey; Suvrath Mahadevan; Stephen L. Redman; Chad F. Bender; Arpita Roy; Stephanie G. Zonak; Steinn Sigurdsson; Alex Wolszczan

The Penn State Pathfinder is a prototype warm fiber-fed Echelle spectrograph with a Hawaii-1 NIR detector that has already demonstrated 7-10 m/s radial velocity precision on integrated sunlight. The Pathfinder testbed was initially setup for the Gemini PRVS design study to enable a systematic exploration of the challenges of achieving high radial velocity precision in the near-infrared, as well as to test possible solutions to these calibration challenges. The current version of the Pathfinder has an R3 echelle grating, and delivers a resolution of R~50,000 in the Y, J or H bands of the spectrum. We will discuss the on sky-performance of the Pathfinder during an engineering test run at the Hobby Eberly Telescope as well the results of velocity observations of M dwarfs. We will also discuss the unique calibration techniques we have explored, like Uranium-Neon hollow cathode lamps, notch filter, and modal noise mitigation to enable high precision radial velocity observation in the NIR. The Pathfinder is a prototype testbed precursor of a cooled high-resolution NIR spectrograph capable of high radial velocity precision and of finding low mass planets around mid-late M dwarfs.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Development of a new, precise near-infrared Dopplerwavelength reference: a fiber Fabry-Perot interferometer

Samuel Halverson; Suvrath Mahadevan; Lawrence W. Ramsey; Stephen L. Redman; Gillian Nave; John C. Wilson; Frederick R. Hearty; Jon D. Holtzman

We present performance reports of a new near-infrared (NIR) Fiber-Fabry Perot Interferometer (FFP) as a precise Doppler radial velocity (RV) wavelength reference. FFPs are monolithic single-mode fiber devices that create emission spectra by interfering light traversing separate delay paths. The resulting interference spectrum provides a rich distribution of narrow lines, ideal for use as a precise spectrograph reference. The FFP has the advantages that the uniform density of emission lines gives a much wider bandwidth over which RV measurements are possible, and the finesse and bandwidth can be optimized for the specific application.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

A near-infrared frequency comb for Y+J band astronomical spectroscopy

Steve Osterman; Gabriel Ycas; Scott A. Diddams; Franklyn Quinlan; Suvrath Mahadevan; Lawrence W. Ramsey; Chad F. Bender; Ryan C. Terrien; Brandon Botzer; Steinn Sigurdsson; Stephen L. Redman

Radial velocity (RV) surveys supported by high precision wavelength references (notably ThAr lamps and I2 cells) have successfully identified hundreds of exoplanets; however, as the search for exoplanets moves to cooler, lower mass stars, the optimum wave band for observation for these objects moves into the near infrared (NIR) and new wavelength standards are required. To address this need we are following up our successful deployment of an H band(1.45-1.7μm) laser frequency comb based wavelength reference with a comb working in the Y and J bands (0.98-1.3μm). This comb will be optimized for use with a 50,000 resolution NIR spectrograph such as the Penn State Habitable Zone Planet Finder. We present design and performance details of the current Y+J band comb.

Collaboration


Dive into the Stephen L. Redman's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lawrence W. Ramsey

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gillian Nave

National Institute of Standards and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ryan C. Terrien

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Scott A. Diddams

National Institute of Standards and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gabriel Ycas

National Institute of Standards and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chad F. Bender

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Steven Neil Osterman

University of Colorado Boulder

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brandon Botzer

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carl M. Bender

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge