Achieving high contrasts with slicer based integral field spectrographs
AO for ELT 2011 - 2nd International Conference on Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes (2011)
Abstract:
We demonstrate experimentally that slicer based integral field spectrographs are an attractive choice for the next generation of exoplanet direct detection instruments. By propagating a single simulated speckle though a slicer based integral field spectrograph (IFS) and performing the post processing technique of spectral deconvolution we are able to achieve a speckle rejection factor of ∼600 in broadband images (and ∼100 in individual wavelength channels) with contrasts only appearing to be limited by calibration errors in the IFS datacube. This is over an order of magnitude improvement on the current state-of-the-art and well within the requirements of EPICS (Exo Planet Imaging Camera and Spectrograph for the E-ELT) for post coronagraphic speckle rejection thus proving that slicers will not impose a limit on the achievable contrast. When using prior knowledge of the diffraction-limited size of real objects we further improve the speckle rejection factor such that it exceeds 103.Dust-correlated cm wavelength continuum emission from translucent clouds ζ Oph and LDN 1780
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 414:3 (2011) 2424-2435
Abstract:
The diffuse cm wave IR-correlated signal, the 'anomalous' CMB foreground, is thought to arise in the dust in cirrus clouds. We present Cosmic Background Imager (CBI) cm wave data of two translucent clouds, ζ Oph and LDN 1780 with the aim of characterizing the anomalous emission in the translucent cloud environment. In ζ Oph, the measured brightness at 31GHz is 2.4σ higher than an extrapolation from 5-GHz measurements assuming a free-free spectrum on 8 arcmin scales. The SED of this cloud on angular scales of 1° is dominated by free-free emission in the cm range. In LDN 1780 we detected a 3σ excess in the SED on angular scales of 1° that can be fitted using a spinning dust model. In this cloud, there is a spatial correlation between the CBI data and IR images, which trace dust. The correlation is better with near-IR templates (IRAS 12 and 25μm) than with IRAS 100μm, which suggests a very small grain origin for the emission at 31GHz. We calculated the 31-GHz emissivities in both clouds. They are similar and have intermediate values between that of cirrus clouds and dark clouds. Nevertheless, we found an indication of an inverse relationship between emissivity and column density, which further supports the VSGs origin for the cm emission since the proportion of big relative to small grains is smaller in diffuse clouds. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.HARMONI: A first light spectrograph for the E-ELT
AO for ELT 2011 - 2nd International Conference on Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes (2011)
Abstract:
We describe the current status of the HARMONI instrument design, which will form the basis for the first-light integral field spectrograph on the European Extremely Large Telescope. We review the phase A design, and highlight current on-going work to evolve the design in-line changing telescope requirements and lessons learned during the Phase A work. We also outline the key science drivers for the instrument, and describe briefly the requirements for the laser tomographic adaptive optics system which is expected to feed HARMONI.Laser Tomographic AO system for an integral field spectrograph on the E-ELT: ATLAS project
AO for ELT 2011 - 2nd International Conference on Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes (2011)
Abstract:
ATLAS is a generic Laser Tomographic AO (LTAO) system for the E-ELT. Based on modular, relatively simple, and yet innovative concepts, it aims at providing diffraction-limited images in the near infra-red for a close to 100 percent sky coverage.Search for squarks and gluinos using final states with jets and missing transverse momentum with the ATLAS detector in √s=7 TeV proton-proton collisions
Physics Letters B Elsevier 701:2 (2011) 186-203