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Dive into the research topics where Sujit Punnadi is active.

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Featured researches published by Sujit Punnadi.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

High-efficiency autonomous laser adaptive optics

Christoph Baranec; Reed Riddle; Nicholas M. Law; A. N. Ramaprakash; Shriharsh P. Tendulkar; Kristina Hogstrom; Khanh Bui; Mahesh P. Burse; Pravin Chordia; H. K. Das; Richard G. Dekany; S. R. Kulkarni; Sujit Punnadi

As new large-scale astronomical surveys greatly increase the number of objects targeted and discoveries made, the requirement for efficient follow-up observations is crucial. Adaptive optics imaging, which compensates for the image-blurring effects of Earths turbulent atmosphere, is essential for these surveys, but the scarcity, complexity and high demand of current systems limit their availability for following up large numbers of targets. To address this need, we have engineered and implemented Robo-AO, a fully autonomous laser adaptive optics and imaging system that routinely images over 200 objects per night with an acuity 10 times sharper at visible wavelengths than typically possible from the ground. By greatly improving the angular resolution, sensitivity, and efficiency of 1-3 m class telescopes, we have eliminated a major obstacle in the follow-up of the discoveries from current and future large astronomical surveys.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

CHARACTERIZING THE COOL KOIs. V. KOI-256: A MUTUALLY ECLIPSING POST-COMMON ENVELOPE BINARY

Philip S. Muirhead; Andrew Vanderburg; Avi Shporer; Juliette C. Becker; Jonathan J. Swift; James P. Lloyd; Jim Fuller; Ming Zhao; Sasha Hinkley; J. Sebastian Pineda; Michael Bottom; Andrew W. Howard; Kaspar von Braun; Tabetha S. Boyajian; Nicholas M. Law; Christoph Baranec; Reed Riddle; A. N. Ramaprakash; Shriharsh P. Tendulkar; Khanh Bui; Mahesh P. Burse; Pravin Chordia; H. K. Das; Richard G. Dekany; Sujit Punnadi; John Asher Johnson

We report that Kepler Object of Interest 256 (KOI-256) is a mutually eclipsing post-common envelope binary (ePCEB), consisting of a cool white dwarf (M_★ = 0.592 ± 0.089 M_☉, R_★ = 0.01345 ± 0.00091 R_☉, T_(eff) = 7100 ± 700 K) and an active M3 dwarf (M_★ = 0.51 ± 0.16 M_☉, R_★ = 0.540 ± 0.014 R_☉, T_(eff) = 3450 ± 50 K) with an orbital period of 1.37865 ± 0.00001 days. KOI-256 is listed as hosting a transiting planet-candidate by Borucki et al. and Batalha et al.; here we report that the planet-candidate transit signal is in fact the occultation of a white dwarf as it passes behind the M dwarf. We combine publicly-available long- and short-cadence Kepler light curves with ground-based measurements to robustly determine the system parameters. The occultation events are readily apparent in the Kepler light curve, as is spin-orbit synchronization of the M dwarf, and we detect the transit of the white dwarf in front of the M dwarf halfway between the occultation events. The size of the white dwarf with respect to the Einstein ring during transit (R_(Ein) = 0.00473 ± 0.00055 R ☉) causes the transit depth to be shallower than expected from pure geometry due to gravitational lensing. KOI-256 is an old, long-period ePCEB and serves as a benchmark object for studying the evolution of binary star systems as well as white dwarfs themselves, thanks largely to the availability of near-continuous, ultra-precise Kepler photometry.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Robo-AO: autonomous and replicable laser-adaptive-optics and science system

Christoph Baranec; Reed Riddle; A. N. Ramaprakash; Nicholas M. Law; Shriharsh P. Tendulkar; S. R. Kulkarni; Richard G. Dekany; K. Bui; Jack Davis; Mahesh P. Burse; H. K. Das; S. Hildebrandt; Sujit Punnadi; Roger Smith

We have created a new autonomous laser-guide-star adaptive-optics (AO) instrument on the 60-inch (1.5-m) telescope at Palomar Observatory called Robo-AO. The instrument enables diffraction-limited resolution observing in the visible and near-infrared with the ability to observe well over one-hundred targets per night due to its fully robotic operation. Robo-AO is being used for AO surveys of targets numbering in the thousands, rapid AO imaging of transient events and long-term AO monitoring not feasible on large diameter telescope systems. We have taken advantage of cost-effective advances in deformable mirror and laser technology while engineering Robo-AO with the intention of cloning the system for other few-meter class telescopes around the world.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Controller and data acquisition system for SIDECAR ASIC driven HAWAII detectors

A. N. Ramaprakash; Mahesh P. Burse; Pravin Chordia; Kalpesh Chillal; Abhay Kohok; Vilas Mestry; Sujit Punnadi; Sakya Sinha

SIDECAR is an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC), which can be used for control and data acquisition from near-IR HAWAII detectors offered by Teledyne Imaging Sensors (TIS), USA. The standard interfaces provided by Teledyne are COM API and socket servers running under MS Windows platform. These interfaces communicate to the ASIC (and the detector) through an intermediate card called JWST ASIC Drive Electronics (JADE2). As part of an ongoing programme of several years, for developing astronomical focal plane array (CCDs, CMOS and Hybrid) controllers and data acquisition systems (CDAQs), IUCAA is currently developing the next generation controllers employing Virtex-5 family FPGA devices. We present here the capabilities which are built into these new CDAQs for handling HAWAII detectors. In our system, the computer which hosts the application programme, user interface and device drivers runs on a Linux platform. It communicates through a hot-pluggable USB interface (with an optional optical fibre extender) to the FPGA-based card which replaces the JADE2. The FPGA board in turn, controls the SIDECAR ASIC and through it a HAWAII-2RG detector, both of which are located in a cryogenic test Dewar set up which is liquid nitrogen cooled. The system can acquire data over 1, 4, or 32 readout channels, with or without binning, at different speeds, can define sub-regions for readout, offers various readout schemes like Fowler sampling, up-theramp etc. In this paper, we present the performance results obtained from a prototype system.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Project status of the Robert Stobie spectrograph near infrared instrument (RSS-NIR) for SALT

M. Wolf; Mark P. Mulligan; Michael P. Smith; Douglas P. Adler; Curtis M. Bartosz; Matthew A. Bershady; David A. H. Buckley; Mahesh P. Burse; Pravin Chordia; J. Christopher Clemens; Harland W. Epps; Kristine Garot; Briana L. Indahl; Kurt P. Jaehnig; Ron J. Koch; William P. Mason; Gregory Mosby; Kenneth H. Nordsieck; Jeffrey W. Percival; Sujit Punnadi; A. N. Ramaprakash; J. Alan Schier; Andrew Sheinis; Stephen A. Smee; Donald J. Thielman; Mark W. Werner; Theodore B. Williams; Jeffrey P. Wong

The Robert Stobie Spectrograph Near Infrared Instrument (RSS-NIR), a prime focus facility instrument for the 11-meter Southern African Large Telescope (SALT), is well into its laboratory integration and testing phase. RSS-NIR will initially provide imaging and single or multi-object medium resolution spectroscopy in an 8 arcmin field of view at wavelengths of 0.9 - 1.7 μm. Future modes, including tunable Fabry-Perot spectral imaging and polarimetry, have been designed in and can be easily added later. RSS-NIR will mate to the existing visible wavelength RSS-VIS via a dichroic beamsplitter, allowing simultaneous operation of the two instruments in all modes. Multi-object spectroscopy covering a wavelength range of 0.32 - 1.7 μm on 10-meter class telescopes is a rare capability and once all the existing VIS modes are incorporated into the NIR, the combined RSS will provide observational modes that are completely unique. The VIS and NIR instruments share a common telescope focal plane, and slit mask for spectroscopic modes, and collimator optics that operate at ambient observatory temperature. Beyond the dichroic beamsplitter, RSS-NIR is enclosed in a pre-dewar box operating at -40 °C, and within that is a cryogenic dewar operating at 120 K housing the detector and final camera optics and filters. This semi-warm configuration with compartments at multiple operating temperatures poses a number of design and implementation challenges. In this paper we present overviews of the RSSNIR instrument design and solutions to design challenges, measured performance of optical components, detector system optimization results, and an update on the overall project status.


The Astronomical Journal | 2015

Know the Star, Know the Planet. IV. A Stellar Companion to the Host Star of the Eccentric Exoplanet HD 8673b

Lewis C. Roberts; Brian D. Mason; Christopher R. Neyman; Yanqin Wu; Reed Riddle; J. Christopher Shelton; John Angione; Christoph Baranec; Antonin Bouchez; Khanh Bui; Rick Burruss; Mahesh P. Burse; Pravin Chordia; Ernest Croner; H. K. Das; Richard G. Dekany; Stephen R. Guiwits; David Hale; John R. Henning; S. R. Kulkarni; Nicholas M. Law; Dan McKenna; Jennifer Milburn; Dean L. Palmer; Sujit Punnadi; A. N. Ramaprakash; Jennifer E. Roberts; Shriharsh P. Tendulkar; Thang Trinh; Mitchell Troy

HD 8673 hosts a massive exoplanet in a highly eccentric orbit (e = 0.723). Based on two epochs of speckle interferometry a previous publication identified a candidate stellar companion. We observed HD 8673 multiple times with the 10 m Keck II telescope, the 5 m Hale telescope, the 3.63 m Advanced Electro-Optical System telescope, and the 1.5 m Palomar telescope in a variety of filters with the aim of confirming and characterizing the stellar companion. We did not detect the candidate companion, which we now conclude was a false detection, but we did detect a fainter companion. We collected astrometry and photometry of the companion on six epochs in a variety of filters. The measured differential photometry enabled us to determine that the companion is an early M dwarf with a mass estimate of 0.33–0.45 M_☉. The companion has a projected separation of 10 AU, which is one of the smallest projected separations of an exoplanet host binary system. Based on the limited astrometry collected, we are able to constrain the orbit of the stellar companion to a semimajor axis of 35–60 AU, an eccentricity ≤0.5, and an inclination of 75°–85°. The stellar companion has likely strongly influenced the orbit of the exoplanet and quite possibly explains its high eccentricity.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

ISDEC-2 and ISDEC-3 controllers for HAWAII detectors

Mahesh P. Burse; A. N. Ramaprakash; Pravinkumar A. Chordia; Sujit Punnadi; Kalpesh Chillal; Vilas Mestri; Rupali Bharti; Sakya Sinha; Abhay Kohok

ISDEC-2 - IUCAA1 SIDECAR Drive Electronics Controller is an alternative for Teledyne make JADE2 based controller for HAWAII detectors. It is a ready to use complete package and has been developed keeping in mind general astronomical requirements and widely used observatory set-ups like preferred OS-Linux , multi-extension fits output with fully populated headers (with detector as well as telescope and observation specific information), etc. Actual exposure time is measured for each frame to a few tens of microsecond accuracy and put in the fits header. It also caters to several application specific requirements like fast resets, strip mode, multiple region readout with on board co-adding, etc. ISDEC-2 is designed to work at -40 deg. and is already in use at observatories worldwide. ISDEC-3 is an Artix-7 FPGA based SIDECAR Drive Electronics Controller currently being developed at IUCAA. It will retain all the functionality supported by ISDEC-2 and will also support the operation of H2RG in continuos, fast (32 output, 5 MSPS, 12 bit) mode. It will have a 5 Gbps USB 3.0 PC interface and 1 Gbps Ethernet interface for image data transfer from SIDECAR to host PC. Additionally, the board will have DDR-3 memory for on-board storage and processing. ISDEC-3 will be capable of handling two SIDECARs simultaneously (in sync) for H2RG slow modes.


3rd Conference on Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes, AO4ELT 2013 | 2013

ROBOTIC VISIBLE-LIGHT LASER ADAPTIVE OPTICS

Christoph Baranec; Reed Riddle; Nicholas M. Law; A. N. Ramaprakash; Shriharsh P. Tendulkar; Khanh Bui; Mahesh P. Burse; Pravin Chordia; H. K. Das; Richard G. Dekany; S. R. Kulkarni; Sujit Punnadi

Robo-AO is the first autonomous laser adaptive optics system and science instrument operating on sky. With minimal human oversight, the system robotically executes large scale surveys, monitors long-term astrophysical dynamics and characterizes newly discovered transients, all at the visible diffraction limit. The adaptive optics setup time, from the end of the telescope slew to the beginning of an observation, is a mere ~50- 60 s, enabling over 200 observations per night. The first of many envisioned systems has finished 58 nights of science observing at the Palomar Observatory 60-inch (1.5 m) telescope, with over 6,400 robotic observations executed thus far. The system will be augmented in late 2013 with a low-noise wide field infrared camera, which doubles as a tip-tilt sensor, to widen the spectral bandwidth of observations and increase available sky coverage while also enabling deeper visible imaging using adaptive-optics sharpened infrared tip-tilt guide sources. Techniques applicable to larger telescope systems will also be tested: the infrared camera will be used to demonstrate advanced multiple region-of-interest tip-tilt guiding methods, and a visitor instrument port will be used for evaluation of other instrumentation, e.g. single-mode and photonic fibers to feed compact spectrographs.


Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII | 2018

Design and results for the SAAO wide-field nasmyth camera

Pieter Swanevelder; David Carter; James O'Connor; Hannah L. Worters; Amanda Sickafoose; Willie P. Koorts; Briehan Lombaard; Egan Loubser; Keegan Titus; Carel van Gend; Craig Sass; Hitesh Gajjar; A. N. Ramaprakash; Pravin Chordia; Mahesh P. Burse; Sujit Punnadi; Bhushan Joshi; Sakya Sinha; Michael Rust

The South African Astronomical Observatory (SAAO) is currently developing WiNCam, the Wide-field Nasmyth Camera, to be mounted on Lesedi, the observatory’s new 1-metre telescope. This paper discusses the design and results for the remotely-operated camera system. The camera consists of an E2V-231-C6 Back Illuminated Scientific Charge Coupled Device (CCD) sensor with 6144x6160 pixels, four outputs operating in non-inverted mode. This is to date the largest single chip CCD-system developed at SAAO. The CCD is controlled with a modified Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA) Digital Sampler Array Controller (IDSAC) utilizing digital correlated double sampling. The camera system will have full-frame and frame-transfer read out modes available with sub-windowing and pre-binning abilities. Vacuum through-wall PCB technology is used to route signals through the vacuum interface between the controller and the CCD. A thin, compact, 125x125mm aperture, sliding-curtain-mechanism shutter was designed and manufactured together with a saddle-type filter-magazine-gripper system. The CCD is cryogenically cooled using a Stirling Cooler with active vibration cancellation; CCD temperature control is done with a Lake Shore Temperature Controller. A Varian Ion Pump and Activated Charcoal are used to maintain good vacuum and to prolong intervals between vacuum pump down. The various hardware components of the system are connected using distributed software architecture, and a web-based GUI allows remote and scripted operation of the instrument.


Adaptive Optics Systems VI | 2018

Design and development of IR camera

Jyotirmay Paul; A. N. Ramaprakash; H. K. Das; Mahesh P. Burse; Pravin Chordia; Pravin Khodade; Abhay Kohok; Deepa Modi; Sujit Punnadi; Chaitanya V. Rajarshi; Vilas Mestry

Atmospheric turbulence is gentle in the infrared regime than visible. Hence adaptive optics (AO) efficiently works in the infrared. The large overheads and low efficiency still limit the applicability of AO on large telescopes for which operational costs per unit time are high. On the other hand, small and medium-sized telescopes are many more in number, and their operational costs are substantially lower. A reasonably powerful AO system, which works with minimal overheads and provides good sky coverage, will greatly enhance the scientific capabilities of small and medium-sized telescopes. Robotic Adaptive Optics (Robo-AO) is an AO system for medium-sized telescopes which is built by Caltech, USA, and IUCAA, India collaboratively. It works with minimal overheads and provides good sky coverage in both visible and infrared regime. The first version of Robo-AO does not have a high-quality IR camera. An IR camera is being developed to accommodate AO-corrected 1.5 0 field of view in near-infrared bands. It can be used as a science camera as well as a tip-tilt camera. It is being built at IUCAA with a HAWAII detector. Here we describe the salient features of the IR camera like optics, optomechanical design, etc.

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A. N. Ramaprakash

Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics

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Mahesh P. Burse

Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics

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H. K. Das

Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics

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Pravin Chordia

Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics

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Christoph Baranec

California Institute of Technology

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Nicholas M. Law

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Reed Riddle

California Institute of Technology

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Richard G. Dekany

California Institute of Technology

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Shriharsh P. Tendulkar

California Institute of Technology

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S. R. Kulkarni

California Institute of Technology

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