Young Sam Yu
Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute
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Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Chan Park; Daniel T. Jaffe; In-Soo Yuk; Moo-Young Chun; Soojong Pak; Kang-Min Kim; Michael Pavel; Hanshin Lee; Heeyoung Oh; Ueejeong Jeong; Chae Kyung Sim; Hye-In Lee; Huynh Anh Nguyen Le; Joseph Strubhar; Michael Gully-Santiago; Jae Sok Oh; Sang-Mok Cha; Bongkon Moon; Kwijong Park; Cynthia B. Brooks; Kyeongyeon Ko; Jeong-Yeol Han; Jakyoung Nah; Peter C. Hill; Sungho Lee; Stuart I. Barnes; Young Sam Yu; Kyle Kaplan; Gregory N. Mace; Hwihyun Kim
The Immersion Grating Infrared Spectrometer (IGRINS) is a compact high-resolution near-infrared cross-dispersed spectrograph whose primary disperser is a silicon immersion grating. IGRINS covers the entire portion of the wavelength range between 1.45 and 2.45μm that is accessible from the ground and does so in a single exposure with a resolving power of 40,000. Individual volume phase holographic (VPH) gratings serve as cross-dispersing elements for separate spectrograph arms covering the H and K bands. On the 2.7m Harlan J. Smith telescope at the McDonald Observatory, the slit size is 1ʺ x 15ʺ and the plate scale is 0.27ʺ pixel. The spectrograph employs two 2048 x 2048 pixel Teledyne Scientific and Imaging HAWAII-2RG detectors with SIDECAR ASIC cryogenic controllers. The instrument includes four subsystems; a calibration unit, an input relay optics module, a slit-viewing camera, and nearly identical H and K spectrograph modules. The use of a silicon immersion grating and a compact white pupil design allows the spectrograph collimated beam size to be only 25mm, which permits a moderately sized (0.96m x 0.6m x 0.38m) rectangular cryostat to contain the entire spectrograph. The fabrication and assembly of the optical and mechanical components were completed in 2013. We describe the major design characteristics of the instrument including the system requirements and the technical strategy to meet them. We also present early performance test results obtained from the commissioning runs at the McDonald Observatory.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Gregory N. Mace; Hwihyun Kim; Daniel T. Jaffe; Chan Park; Jae-Joon Lee; Kyle Kaplan; Young Sam Yu; In-Soo Yuk; Moo-Young Chun; Soojong Pak; Kang-Min Kim; Jeong-Eun Lee; Christopher Sneden; Melike Afşar; Michael Pavel; Hanshin Lee; Heeyoung Oh; Ueejeong Jeong; Sunkyung Park; Benjamin Kidder; Hye-In Lee; Huynh Anh Nguyen Le; Jacob N. McLane; Michael Gully-Santiago; Jae Sok Oh; Sungho Lee; Narae Hwang; Byeong-Gon Park
The Immersion Grating Infrared Spectrometer (IGRINS) is a revolutionary instrument that exploits broad spectral coverage at high-resolution in the near-infrared. IGRINS employs a silicon immersion grating as the primary disperser, and volume-phase holographic gratings cross-disperse the H and K bands onto Teledyne Hawaii-2RG arrays. The use of an immersion grating facilitates a compact cryostat while providing simultaneous wavelength coverage from 1.45 - 2.5 μm. There are no cryogenic mechanisms in IGRINS and its high-throughput design maximizes sensitivity. IGRINS on the 2.7 meter Harlan J. Smith Telescope at McDonald Observatory is nearly as sensitive as CRIRES at the 8 meter Very Large Telescope. However, IGRINS at R≈45,000 has more than 30 times the spectral grasp of CRIRES* in a single exposure. Here we summarize the performance of IGRINS from the first 300 nights of science since commissioning in summer 2014. IGRINS observers have targeted solar system objects like Pluto and Ceres, comets, nearby young stars, star forming regions like Taurus and Ophiuchus, the interstellar medium, photo dissociation regions, the Galactic Center, planetary nebulae, galaxy cores and super novae. The rich near-infrared spectra of these objects motivate unique science cases, and provide information on instrument performance. There are more than ten submitted IGRINS papers and dozens more in preparation. With IGRINS on a 2.7m telescope we realize signal-to-noise ratios greater than 100 for K=10.3 magnitude sources in one hour of exposure time. Although IGRINS is Cassegrain mounted, instrument flexure is sub-pixel thanks to the compact design. Detector characteristics and stability have been tested regularly, allowing us to adjust the instrument operation and improve science quality. A wide variety of science programs motivate new tools for analyzing high-resolution spectra including multiplexed spectral extraction, atmospheric model fitting, rotation and radial velocity, unique line identification, and circumstellar disk modeling. Here we discuss details of instrument performance, summarize early science results, and show the characteristics of IGRINS as a versatile near-infrared spectrograph and forerunner of future silicon immersion grating spectrographs like iSHELL2 and GMTNIRS.3
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Heeyoung Oh; Tae-Soo Pyo; In-Soo Yuk; Byeong-Gon Park; Chan Park; Moo-Young Chun; Soojong Pak; Kang-Min Kim; Jae Sok Oh; Ueejeong Jeong; Young Sam Yu; Jae-Joon Lee; Hwihyun Kim; Narae Hwang; Kyle Kaplan; Michael Pavel; Gregory N. Mace; Hye-In Lee; Huynh Anh Nguyen Le; Sungho Lee; Daniel T. Jaffe
We present the results of high-resolution near-IR spectroscopy toward the multiple outflows around the Herbig Be star Lk{\Ha} 234 using the Immersion Grating Infrared Spectrograph (IGRINS). Previous studies indicate that the region around Lk{\Ha} 234 is complex, with several embedded YSOs and the outflows associated with them. In simultaneous H
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Andrew Szentgyorgyi; Stuart I. Barnes; Jacob L. Bean; Bruce C. Bigelow; Antonin H. Bouchez; Moo-Young Chun; Jeffrey D. Crane; Harland W. Epps; Ian Evans; Janet Evans; Anna Frebel; Gabor Furesz; Alex Glenday; Dani Guzman; Tyson Hare; Bi-Ho Jang; Jeong-Gyun Jang; Ueejong Jeong; Andres Jordan; Kang-Min Kim; Jihun Kim; Chih-Hao Li; Mercedes Lopez-Morales; Kenneth McCracken; Brian A. McLeod; Mark Mueller; Ja-Kyung Nah; Timothy Norton; Heeyoung Oh; Jae Sok Oh
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The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Heeyoung Oh; Tae-Soo Pyo; Kyle Kaplan; In-Soo Yuk; Byeong-Gon Park; Gregory N. Mace; Chan Park; Moo-Young Chun; Soojong Pak; Kang-Min Kim; Jae Sok Oh; Ueejeong Jeong; Young Sam Yu; Jae-Joon Lee; Hwihyun Kim; Narae Hwang; Hye-In Lee; Huynh Anh Nguyen Le; Sungho Lee; Daniel T. Jaffe
and K
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Andrew Szentgyorgyi; Daniel Baldwin; Stuart Barnes; Jacob L. Bean; Sagi Ben-Ami; Patricia Brennan; Jamie Budynkiewicz; Moo Young Chun; Charlie Conroy; Jeffrey D. Crane; Harland W. Epps; Ian Evans; Janet Evans; Jeff Foster; Anna Frebel; Thomas Gauron; Dani Guzman; Tyson Hare; Bi Ho Jang; Jeong Gyun Jang; Andrés Jordán; Jihun Kim; Kang Miin Kim; Claudia Mendes Oliveira; Mercedes Lopez-Morales; Kenneth McCracken; Stuart McMuldroch; Joseph Miller; Mark Mueller; Jae Sok Oh
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The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
A-Ran Lyo; Jongsoo Kim; Jae-Joon Lee; Kyoung-Hee Kim; Ji-hyun Kang; Do-Young Byun; Gregory N. Mace; Kimberly R. Sokal; Chan Park; Moo-Young Chun; Heeyoung Oh; Young Sam Yu; Jae Sok Oh; Ueejeong Jeong; Hwihyun Kim; Soojong Pak; Narae Hwang; Byeong-Gon Park; Sungho Lee; Kyle Kaplan; Hye-In Lee; Huynh Anh Nguyen Le; Daniel T. Jaffe
band spectra from HH 167, we detected 5 {\FeII} and 14 H
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Ueejeong Jeong; Moo Young Chun; Jae Sok Oh; Chan Park; In Soo Yuk; Heeyoung Oh; Kang Min Kim; Kyeong Yeon Ko; Michael Pavel; Young Sam Yu; Daniel T. Jaffe
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Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2018: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter Wave | 2018
Dae-Hee Lee; Youngsik Park; Jeonghyun Pyo; Won-Kee Park; Il-Joong Kim; Norihide Takeyama; Akito Enokuchi; Minjin Kim; Bongkon Moon; Sung-Joon Park; Woong-Seob Jeong; Duk-Hang Lee; Kyeong Yeon Ko; Min-Gyu Kim; Jongwan Ko; Young Sam Yu; Toshio Matsumoto; Jang-Soo Chae; Goo-Hwan Shin
emission lines. We revealed a new {\FeII} jet driven by radio continuum source VLA 3B. Position-velocity diagrams of H
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Jae Sok Oh; Chan Park; Jihun Kim; Kang-Min Kim; Moo-Young Chun; Young Sam Yu; Sungho Lee; Jakyoung Nah; Sung-Joon Park; Andrew Szentgyorgyi; Stuart McMuldroch; Timothy Norton; William A. Podgorski; Ian Evans; Mark Mueller; Alan Uomoto; Jeffrey D. Crane; Tyson Hare
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