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Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At Oxford we study black holes observationally and theoretically on all size and time scales - it is some of our core work.

Credit: ALAIN RIAZUELO, IAP/UPMC/CNRS. CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE IMAGES.

Prof. Niranjan Thatte

Professor of Astrophysics

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics
  • Instrumentation
  • Exoplanets and planetary physics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Astronomical instrumentation
  • Exoplanets and Stellar Physics
  • Galaxy formation and evolution
  • Extremely Large Telescope
Niranjan.Thatte@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73412
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 709
  • About
  • Teaching
  • Publications

The E-ELT first light spectrograph HARMONI: capabilities and modes

Proceedings of SPIE--the International Society for Optical Engineering SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics 9908 (2016) 99081x-99081x-11

Authors:

Niranjan A Thatte, Fraser Clarke, Ian Bryson, Hermine Shnetler, Matthias Tecza, Thierry Fusco, Roland M Bacon, Johan Richard, Evencio Mediavilla, Benoît Neichel, Santiago Arribas, Begoña Garcia-Lorenzo, Christopher J Evans, Alban Remillieux, Kacem El Madi, Jose Miguel Herreros, Dave Melotte, Kieran O'Brien, Ian A Tosh, Joël Vernet, Peter Hammersley, Derek J Ives, Gert Finger, Ryan Houghton, Dimitra Rigopoulou, James D Lynn, Jamie R Allen, Simon D Zieleniewski, Sarah Kendrew, Vanessa Ferraro-Wood, Arlette Pécontal-Rousset, Johan Kosmalski, Florence Laurent, Magali Loupias, Laure Piqueras, Edgar Renault, Jeremy Blaizot, Eric Daguisé, Jean-Emmanuel Migniau, Aurélien Jarno, Andy Born, Angus M Gallie, David M Montgomery, David Henry, Noah Schwartz, William Taylor, Gérard Zins, Luis Fernando Rodríguez-Ramos, Miguel Cagigas, Giuseppina Battaglia, Refael Rebolo López, Elvio Hernández Suárez, José Vicente Gigante-Ripoll, Javier Piqueras López, Montserrat Villa Martin, Carlos Correia, Sandrine Pascal, Leonardo Blanco, Pascal Vola, Benoit Epinat, Celine Peroux, Arthur Vigan, Kjetil Dohlen, Jean-Francois Sauvage, Martin Lee, Alexis Carlotti, Christophe Verinaud, Tim Morris, Richard Myers, Andrew Reeves, Mark Swinbank, Ariadna Calcines, Marrie Larrieu
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Natural guide-star processing for wide-field laser-assisted AO systems

Adaptive Optics Systems V Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers (2016)

Authors:

Carlos M Correia, Benoit Neichel, Jean-Marc Conan, Cyril Petit, Jean-Francois Sauvage, Thierry Fusco, Joel DR Vernet, Niranjan Thatte

Abstract:

Sky-coverage in laser-assisted AO observations largely depends on the system's capability to guide on the faintest natural guide-stars possible. Here we give an up-to-date status of our natural guide-star processing tailored to the European-ELT's visible and near-infrared (0.47 to 2.45 μm) integral field spectrograph — Harmoni.
We tour the processing of both the isoplanatic and anisoplanatic tilt modes using the spatio-angular approach whereby the wavefront is estimated directly in the pupil plane avoiding a cumbersome explicit layered estimation on the 35-layer profiles we're currently using.
Taking the case of Harmoni, we cover the choice of wave-front sensors, the number and field location of guide-stars, the optimised algorithms to beat down angular anisoplanatism and the performance obtained with different temporal controllers under split high-order/low-order tomography or joint tomography. We consider both atmospheric and far greater telescope wind buffeting disturbances. In addition we provide the sky-coverage estimates thus obtained.
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Preparation of AO-related observations and post-processing recipes for E-ELT HARMONI-SCAO

Proceedings of SPIE--the International Society for Optical Engineering SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics 9909 (2016) 990978-990978-10

Authors:

Noah Schwartz, Jean-François Sauvage, Carlos Correia, Benoît Neichel, Léonardo Blanco, Thierry Fusco, Arlette Pécontal-Rousset, Aurélien Jarno, Laure Piqueras, Kjetil Dohlen, Kacem El Hadi, Niranjan Thatte, Ian Bryson, Fraser Clarke, Hermine Schnetler
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The adaptive optics modes for HARMONI: from Classical to Laser Assisted Tomographic AO

Proceedings of SPIE--the International Society for Optical Engineering SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics 9909 (2016) 990909-990909-15

Authors:

B Neichel, T Fusco, J-F Sauvage, C Correia, K Dohlen, K El-Hadi, L Blanco, N Schwartz, F Clarke, NA Thatte, M Tecza, J Paufique, J Vernet, M Le Louarn, P Hammersley, J-L Gach, S Pascale, P Vola, C Petit, J-M Conan, A Carlotti, C Vérinaud, H Schnetler, I Bryson, T Morris, R Myers, E Hugot, AM Gallie, David M Henry
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Simulated stellar kinematics studies of high-redshift galaxies with the HARMONI Integral Field Spectrograph

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 458:3 (2016) 2405-2422

Authors:

S Kendrew, S Zieleniewski, RCW Houghton, Niranjan Thatte, J Devriendt, M Tecza, F Clarke, K O'Brien, B Häussler

Abstract:

We present a study into the capabilities of integrated and spatially resolved integral field spectroscopy of galaxies at z = 2–4 with the future HARMONI spectrograph for the European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT) using the simulation pipeline, HSIM. We focus particularly on the instrument's capabilities in stellar absorption line integral field spectroscopy, which will allow us to study the stellar kinematics and stellar population characteristics. Such measurements for star-forming and passive galaxies around the peak star formation era will provide a critical insight into the star formation, quenching and mass assembly history of high-z, and thus present-day galaxies. First, we perform a signal-to-noise study for passive galaxies at a range of stellar masses for z = 2–4, assuming different light profiles; for this population, we estimate that integrated stellar absorption line spectroscopy with HARMONI will be limited to galaxies with M* ≳ 1010.7 M⊙. Secondly, we use HSIM to perform a mock observation of a typical star-forming 1010 M⊙ galaxy at z = 3 generated from the high-resolution cosmological simulation NUTFB. We demonstrate that the input stellar kinematics of the simulated galaxy can be accurately recovered from the integrated spectrum in a 15-h observation, using common analysis tools. Whilst spatially resolved spectroscopy is likely to remain out of reach for this particular galaxy, we estimate HARMONI's performance limits in this regime from our findings. This study demonstrates how instrument simulators such as HSIM can be used to quantify instrument performance and study observational biases on kinematics retrieval; and shows the potential of making observational predictions from cosmological simulation output data.
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