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Delve into specific astronomy topics related to crowded stellar fields, galaxy morphology, photometry, anisoplanatic effects, and detecting faint objects near bright ones. Explore PSF variations, measuring galaxy structural parameters, and challenges in detecting faint objects in imaging data.
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Experiences with Hokupa’a on Gemini Mark Chun USGP AO Workshop 26-27 Feb 2001
Highlight a few specific issues • Crowded stellar fields • M32 central stellar populations • M15 Anisoplanatism • Galaxy morphology & structural parameters • I. Jorgensen’s simulations • Detecting faint things near bright objects • Search for low-z DLA absorption systems • Residual aberrations in PSFs
1. Stellar Photometry • M32 Program lead by Tim Davidge • Ref: Davidge et al. 2000, ApJL, 545, L89. • Goal: resolve stars to r~2” in the core and measure photometry • Represents the good and bad of AO images • non-diffraction-limited but decent FWHM PSFs varying across a crowded stellar field.
Central 20” in H & K-bands FWHM ~ 0.12” in H and K
0-2” 2-4” 4-7.4” 7.4-13.1”
Anisoplanatic effects • We have been monitoring variations of anisoplanatic effects with observations of globular clusters during each run. • e.g. M15 data covers a large range of off-axis angles with a crowded field • Extracted PSFs in different radial (0,10,20,30”) and azimuthal (NW,NE,SW) bins. • PSFs are a combination of many stars in bin • bright, unsat stars, iterative sig-clip combination
Simple model for PSF variations • The majority of the anisoplanatic error is due to decorrelation of the tip/tilt. • Assume this introduces a gaussian smear. • Deconvolve the off-axis PSFs by the on-axis PSF and fit with a 2-D gaussian G(r,q) • For analysis construct an off-axis PSF from a convolution of the on-axis PSF and G(r,q).
2. Measuring galaxy structural parameters • Example: Combine HST & Hokupa’a data to study stellar populations in A+E galaxy • Simulations from Inger Jorgensen (Gemini)
Seeing-limited off-axis (30”) on-axis Detection of individual sources • Simulations of 7”x7” z~0.6 field with AO • H, 6-hour
Distinguishing galaxy profiles Off-axis On-axis “raw” Fit r1/4 profiles Fit exponential
Measured total magnitude mtotal [output] mtotal [input]
Measured total magnitude Off-axis Dmtotal [output] On-axis: too faint mtotal [input]
Measuring galaxy sizes log re [output] log re [input]
Measuring galaxy sizes On-axis: too small Dlog re [output] Off-axis log re [input]
3. Trying to detect faint objects • Principal problem: knowledge of residual high-order aberrations in PSF. • Example programs: • Detecting low-mass stellar/substellar companions. • We have imaged in K’ to look for origin of low-z DLA absorber systems with small impact parameters or LSB features.
Rao & Turnshek 1998, ApJL, 500, L115 zabs=0.0912, 0.2212 Cohen 2000, astro-ph/0012109 G1 & G10 match zabs
No LSB near Q2251+113 or Q0738+380 • with similar limiting surface brightnesses • SBlim ~ 17.8 mag/arcsec2, 3sigma • But small impact parameter space ??? G1
Residual aberrations in PSF • Residual high-order aberrations • Origin: atm, telescope, Hokupaa or QUIRC. • Telescope aberrations rotate with the pupil • atmospheric average out over time periods of ? • Hokupa’a and QUIRC fixed on detector/field. • Telescope aberrations • Determine by derotating images (fixed pupil) • Whether you see effect depends on level of correction
Static aberrations in PSF • diffraction spot have peaks ~few % of central peak
Summary • Stellar photometry in crowded fields • Need to deal with PSF fitting and anisoplanicity (Doug Currie’s and Eric Steinbring’s talks) • Measuring galaxy structural parameters • Need good SNR in PSF and its variations • Does simple anisoplanatic model improve fits? • Luc Simard’s talk • High-order static aberrations in telescope will limit faint object detection near bright objects • Can we deal with this if we characterize it? (Claude Roddier’s talk)