1 / 26

Imaging,Visible, Tunable, Narrow- Passband Filter System

Imaging,Visible, Tunable, Narrow- Passband Filter System. A Multiple Fabry-Perot Etalon Interferometer for the ATST G. Allen Gary/MSFC, K. S. Balasubramaniam/NSO, Michael Sigwarth/KIS, Thomas Kentischer/KIS, Gil Moretto/NSO, and the ATST team.

leena
Télécharger la présentation

Imaging,Visible, Tunable, Narrow- Passband Filter System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Imaging,Visible, Tunable, Narrow-Passband Filter System A Multiple Fabry-Perot Etalon Interferometer for the ATST G. Allen Gary/MSFC, K. S. Balasubramaniam/NSO, Michael Sigwarth/KIS, Thomas Kentischer/KIS, Gil Moretto/NSO, and the ATST team 27 August 2003 – ATST Conceptual Design Review

  2. Outline of the Presentation • The MFPI concept • Baseline Instrument: Triple Fabry-Perot Etalons • Optical Layout and Interface for the ATST • Technology development • Estimated Cost • Science

  3. Fabry-Perot Etalons • Commensurate spectral resolution for high resolution imaging at telescope resolution • 1/250,000 at 500 nm • High light throughput • Sufficient number of spectral samples within solar oscillation periods, solar feature changes • Rapid tuning, calibrations • Better compensation for atmospheric effects, • And stability • Provides simple spectroscopy and polarimetry of multiple lines in encompassing fashion • Polarization fidelity and purity • Uses commercial technology • Visible range coverage (450nm-750nm)

  4. Comparison with other alternatives Gary, G. A., & Balasubrumanium, K. S., 2003, Additional Notes Concerning the Selection of A Multiple_Etalon for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope.

  5. Multiple Imaging Modes • Imaging spectrograph/spectropolarimeter ( 2pm, 0.5-1’ FOV) • TESOS, IBIS, NSO Dual FPs • Imaging Spectro-polarimeter /Imaging Magnetograph, (5pm – 12pm, 3’ FOV) • UBF/Filter Magnetographs • Intermediate-band filter (20pm – 30pm, 1-3’ FOV) • Dual FP System, UBF-FP combination filters • Broad-band filter (0.1nm - 2nm, 3’FOV) • Reflection slit-jaw spectroscopy, UBF-like spectroscopy Spectral Coverage 450 – 750 nm Imaging Spectrographic Observations

  6. Multiple Observational Modes

  7. Resolution & Spectral Purity • Single etalon system • Airy Function, very narrow blocking filter (~0.2nm) • for R=0.94, minimum transmittance is 10-3 of the maximum. • Multiple etalon system • Reflectance of coatings, of combined etalons • Narrow blocking filters (~1nm) • Optimize spectral purity with • Ratio of Finesse • Free spectral range • Design of prefilters • Triple Etalons have superior out-of-band rejection by placement of etalon minima • Darvaan and Owner-Peterson (1994) Performance based on analysis of maximum ghost and SNR 10-4 Reference: Gary, G. A., Balasubramaniam, K. S., and Sigwarth, M.: 2003,’ Multiple Etalon Systems for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope’, SPIE proceeding: “Innovative Telescopes and Instruments for Solar Physics”, eds. Stephen L. Keil and Serge V. Avakyan, SPIE 4853-37, p. 252-272.

  8. Single vs. Multiple Etalons Objective: Spectral resolution = Dl/l~ 0.5x10-5 or 2 pm • Single etalon system • Spectral resolution: Dl/l~ l/ F 2 d , • F is the finesse and d is the etalon gap distance. • For d~1mm, l=500nm, Dl/l~10-3 /F; the FSR=0.1nm, and narrow FWHM blocking filters are required. Spectral resolution of 10-5 requires high finesse (F>100!). • Multiple etalon system • Spectral resolution is given by Dl/l~ FSR / F l • FSR is the free spectral range of the multi-etalons in combination. • For l=500nm, then Dl/l~ 10-3/FSR , the Spectral resolution of 10-5 requires only a FSR~10nm, hence need low finesse of 20 and wide FWHM for the blocking filters

  9. TESOS Heritage

  10. Required Etalon Aperture n=1 (Air/He gap) n=2.1 (liquid gap) Dl FOV=3’ FOV=1’ x 0.48 200mm The wavelength variation versus aperture, for 4m ATST primary with FOV's of 1 and 3’. The solid lines are for l=5250Å and the dashed curve is for l=6302Å. For 3’ FOV the shift is 120mA for 250mm-aperture (A). For a 1’ FOV a 100mm etalon would allow a reasonable shift of ~100mA across the field of view (B) . The narrow band filter system in a ~100mA mode could do filter magnetograms. For a spectro-polarimeter with (~20mA) it seems that 150-200mm aperture is required for 1’ FOV (C). Grey Bar: F~25 realistic apertures

  11. Requirements • Minimum aperture: 200mm diameter • Wavelength range: 450-750nm • Bi-modal operation - dual and triple system • Spectral resolution • 1/250,000 for triple etalon - 50,000 for dual etalon • Minimum Peak Transmission • 50% (with blocking filters) • Minimum Peak Transmission • 10-4 • Maximum Stray-light • 10-3 • Drift Stability • 1mÅ/hr

  12. TESOS/KIS Optics

  13. TESOS/KIS Optical Design Ghost Suppressors Cameras 3 or 2 Etalons Monitors Motorized Variable Focal Plane Reticules, Pinholes Targets, & Stops Laser Source White Light Imaging, radiance, scaling Alignment Mask

  14. ATST Telecentric Optical Design

  15. MFPI 36”FOV MODE Optical Design Specifications: • Input Beam: ATST Coudé F/20 • 200MM Etalons on F/300 Tel. Beam • 100MM Collimated Beam (Filters) • WVL Band: 450 to 750nm • 36” FOV Camera: Ps=1.25”/mm • All Spherical Lenses • All Spherical Mirrors Gil Moretto/NSO

  16. ATST COUDÉ F/20 + MFPI 36”FOV MODE

  17. MFPI 36”FOV MODE LAYOUT

  18. TELECENTRICITY

  19. MFPI 36”FOV CAMERA OPTICAL PERFORMANCE POLYCHROMATIC

  20. Issues • Determine etalon parameters (d,R,F) Detail Darvann-Owner-Peterson- Analysis: Minimize light from parasitic orders Emphasizing compatible with operation: actual parameters, electronic control, optical setup, & drifts • The final finesse and tunability of the 20cm etalons Early purchase and test of first (or a) 20cm etalon • Flat fielding problems due to drift Atmospheric monitoring and correction • Polarimeter design Refine dual camera polarimeter Compatibility with multiple mirror and nonpolarizing beam splitters and ATST Mueller matrix

  21. Issues • Spatial reflection ghost Tilt, wedge angles, calibration, optical testing at TESOS • Determine building strategy Full or partial construction, prefilter set • Refine estimated cost Updated pricing and cost analysis • Telecentric beam/ Collimated Option F/250 at FPIs Detail pupil apodization analysis • Complexities of off-axis optical systems Detail optical ray tracing and analysis Polarization study and Coude focus

  22. Technology Studies • Laura Allaire (Ph.D. student) in Optics at the University of Rochester is centering her thesis work on multiple Fabry-Perot interferometry and will assist in the ATST MFPI design. She started this summer (2003). • Gil Moretto/NSO will continue to improve the breadboard design of the ATST MFPI. • Ghost, apodization,and general concerns listed above will continue to be studied. (Allaire/UR) • A second observational run at TESOS will hopefully provide a more through understanding of their instrument (e.g. ghost, drift, and spectral resolution). Thomas Kentischer/KIS is active member of the team. • An improved cost estimate will be developed (lens vs mirrror) • Alternate concepts will be explored, e.g. dual etalons, as first light configuration • Flexible optical design to be considered to allow for advancement in technology.

  23. Cost estimate (preliminary) • Engineering design…………………....$ 1,200,000 • [Optical, Mechanical, Electronic–Engineers and Scientist-Project Manager for 2 years each] • Optical elements……………………….$ 21,000 • Mechanical elements………………….$ 12,000 • Electronic elements……………………$ 140,000 • Three 20cm etalons……………………$ 834,000 • Commercial software ………….……...$ 4,000 • Electronic and computer Interface…....$ 175,000 • Assembly, test, & integration…………$ 300,000 • [Optical, Mechanical, Electronic-Engineers and Scientist-Project Manager for 1/2 years each] • Total…… $2,686,000

  24. ATST Science • The imaging filter system for the ATST will provide the observational opportunities to spectrally probe the magnetic and hydrodynamic fine structures of the photosphere and the chromosphere at ultra-high spatial resolution. • This filter will possess high-transmittance, and allow instantaneous, narrow-band spectral observations over an extended area of the Sun. • The observations will allow rapid 3D-imaging spectrometry, Stokes spectropolarimetry, accurate surface photometry, and provide spectroheliograms that will measure Doppler velocity, transverse flows, and allow feature tracking, and the study of evolutionary changes of solar activity. When incorporated with the adaptive optics (AO) system, (with added optical correction techniques such as speckle interferometry), focal-volume and other post-focal techniques will allow finer spatio-spectral analysis. • Narrow-band spectral imagery offers the advantage of avoiding spectrograph rasterization, with a distinct disadvantage of sequential tuning; but its high throughput and resultant cadence, coupled with active and adaptive optics corrections provide a good mitigation for this disadvantage. • Provide one of the core instruments in multiple instrument mode of observing solar phenomena.

  25. Summary • Multiple-Filter Modes • Narrow Passband Spectral Power: 250,000 (2pm) • Throughput: 50% (goal) • Field of View: 1-3 arcmin (mode dependent) • Wavelength Coverage: 450-750 nm • Dual Camera Polarimetry • Spectral Purity: Parasitic peaks < 10-4 • Existing Technology

  26. References • Gary, G. A., Balasubramaniam, K. S., & Sigwarth, M.: 2003, “Multiple-etalon Systems for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope, Innovative Telescopes and Instrumentation for Solar Astrophysics”, eds. S. L. Keil and S. V. Avakyan, SPIE Proceedings 4853, 252. • Gary, G. A., Balasubramaniam, K. S., & Sigwarth, M.: 2003, “Additional Notes Concerning the Selection of a Multiple-Etalon System for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope”, Internal ATST document (currently) • Kentischer, T., Sigwarth, M., Schmidt, W., and v. Uexkull, M.: 1998, “TESOS-Telecentric Etalon Solar Spectrometer”, TB v1.0, Kiepenheuer Institut fur Sonnenphysik, Freiburg, Germany. • Kentischer, T., Sigwarth, M., Schmidt, W., and v. Uexkull, M.: 1998, "TESOS, a double Fabry-Perot instrument for solar spectroscopy", A&A, 340, 569. • Langhans, K.; Schmidt, W.; Tritschler, A., 2002,“2D-spectroscopic observations of G-band bright structures in the solar photosphere”, Astronomy and Astrophysics, 394, 1069. • Tritschler, A.; Schmidt, W.; Langhans, K.; Kentischer, T., 2002,“High-resolution solar spectroscopy with TESOS - Upgrade from a double to a triple system”, Solar Physics, 211, 17. • von der Lühe, O. and Kentischer, Th. J.: 2000, “High Spatial Resolution of a Triple Fabry-Perot Filtergraph”,Astron. Astrophys. Suppl. Ser., 146, 499.

More Related