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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

Teaching Insights

Education

School is to make students 'Yearn to Learn'. College is to get students to 'Learn to Learn'

LUCIFER: a multi-mode NIR instrument for the LBT

P SOC PHOTO-OPT INS 4841 (2003) 962-973

Authors:

W Seifert, I Appenzeller, H Baumeister, P Bizenberger, D Bomans, RJ Dettmar, B Grimm, T Herbst, R Hofmann, M Jutte, W Laun, M Lehmitz, R Lemke, R Lenzen, H Mandel, K Polsterer, RR Rohloff, A Schutze, A Seltmann, N Thatte, P Weiser, W Xu

Abstract:

LUCIFER (LBT NIR-Spectroscopic Utility with Camera and Integral-Field Unit for Extragalactic Research) is a NIR spectrograph and imager for the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) on Mt. Graham, Arizona. It is built by a consortium of five German institutes and will be one of the first light instruments for the LBT. Later, a second copy for the second mirror of the telescope will follow. Both instruments will be mounted at the bent Gregorian foci of the two individual telescope mirrors. The final design of the instrument is presently in progress.LUCIFER will work at cryogenic temperature in the wavelength range from 0.9 mum to 2.5 mum. It is equipped with three exchangeable cameras for imaging and spectroscopy: two of them are optimized for seeing-limited conditions, the third camera for the diffraction-limited case with the LBT adaptive secondary mirror working. The spectral resolution will allow for OH suppression. Up to 33 exchangeable masks will be available for longslit and multi-object spectroscopy (MOS) over the full field of view (FOV). The detector will be a Rockwell HAWAII-2 HgCdTe-array.
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Observations of faint galaxies with adaptive optics

P SOC PHOTO-OPT INS 4834 (2003) 302-309

Authors:

R Davies, M Lehnert, AJ Baker, N Thatte, A Renzini, D Bonaccini

Abstract:

Encouraged by imaging of faint galaxies around bright stars using ALFA on the 3.5-m telescope at Calar Alto, we have begun a survey to identify a large number of candidate sources near bright stars. In this contribution we report the status of this survey and show our preliminary results from deep imaging around one of these stars during the early phases of CONICA and NAOS on the 8.2-m VLT. We outline the exciting prospects for this type of work in terms of number counts, morphology, and rotation curve analyses.
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SINFONI - Integral field spectroscopy at 50 niilli-arcsecond resolution with the ESO VLT

P SOC PHOTO-OPT INS 4841 (2003) 1548-1561

Authors:

F Eisenhauer, H Bonnet, R Abuter, K Bickert, F Bianca-Marchet, J Brynnel, R Conzelmann, B Delabre, R Donaldson, J Farinto, E Fedrigo, G Finger, R Genzel, N Hubin, C Iserlohe, M Kasper, M Kissler-Patig, G Monnet, C Rohrle, J Schreiber, S Stefan, M Tecza, N Thatte, H Weisz

Abstract:

SINFONI is an adaptive optics assisted near-infrared integral field spectrometer for the ESO VLT. The Adaptive Optics Module (built by the ESO Adaptive Optics Group) is a 60-elements curvature-sensor based system, designed for operations with natural or sodium laser guide stars. The near-infrared integral field spectrometer SPIFFI (built by the Infrared Group of MPE) provides simultaneous spectroscopy of 32 x 32 spatial pixels, and a spectral resolving power of up to 3300. The adaptive optics module is in the phase of integration; the spectrometer is presently tested in the laboratory. We provide an overview of the project, with particular emphasis on the problems encountered in designing and building an adaptive optics assisted spectrometer.
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SPIFFI image slicer: High-precision optics at cryogenic temperatures

P SOC PHOTO-OPT INS 4842 (2003) 375-383

Authors:

M Tecza, F Eisenhauer, C Iserlohe, N Thatte, R Abuter, C Rohrle, J Schreiber

Abstract:

SPIFFI is the near-infrared integral field spectrograph of the SINFONI VLT instrument. SPIFFI uses an image slicer with plane mirrors as its integral field unit. The integral field unit consists of two stacks of mirrors, each with 32 mirrors, rearranging a two-dimensional field-of-view of 32 x 32 pixels into a one-dimensional pseudo slit, which is fed into a long-slit spectrograph. The image slicer is constructed solely, from Zerodur and is operated at a cryogenic temperature of 77 Kelvin. Only optical contacting is used for the assembly of the individual slicer mirrors and the image slicer on its base-plate. The special slicer mount holds the image slicer stress-free and compensates for the different thermal coefficients of expansion of the Zerodur image slicer and the Aluminium mount. Tests at room and cryogenic temperatures show the performance of the image slicer, the durability of the optical contacting technique, and the accuracy of the slicer mount.
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Studying the dynamics of star forming and IR luminous galaxies with infrared spectroscopy

ESO ASTROPHY SYMP (2003) 74-84

Authors:

R Genzel, LJ Tacconi, M Barden, MD Lehnert, D Lutz, D Rigopoulou, N Thatte

Abstract:

With the advent of efficient near-IR spectrometers on 10m-class telescopes, exploiting the new generation of low readout noise, large format detectors, OH avoidance and sub-arcsecond seeing, 1-2.4mum spectroscopy can now be exploited for detailed galaxy dynamics and for studies of high-z galaxies. In the following we present the results of three recent IR spectroscopy studies on the dynamics of ULIRG mergers, on super star clusters in the Antennae, and on the properties of the rotation curves of zsimilar to1 disk galaxies, carried out with ISAAC on the VLT, and NIRSPEC on the Keck.
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