We have recently initiated a multi-institutional research program that will examine existing pipelines and catalog potential sources of variation in their resulting RV measurements. Through a series of EPRV community meetings we aim to establish community recommended, standardized formats for EPRV data products and to develop/distribute the tools necessary for direct comparisons of EPRV data between modern instruments. This program will lay the groundwork for a modular, open source, EPRV analysis toolbox that will be compatible with a wide variety of current and future instruments. Here we will provide a progress report on the program’s steps towards this community-endorsed data standard, and highlight lessons learned from the early years of operation across the NEID, KPF, EXPRES, CARMENES, HPF, and MAROON-X RV spectrographs.
iLocater is a new, near-infrared, extreme precision radial velocity (EPRV) spectrograph under construction for the dual 8.4m diameter Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). The instrument uses single-mode fibers (SMFs) injected with adaptive optics for illumination. We present the integration process for the spectrograph and cryostat systems, and the laboratory performance testing that has been completed. Testing has included optical performance characterization at ambient and cryogenic temperatures, assessment of cryogenic thermal control of the system (80-100K) at sub-mK level, and instrument detector performance (an H4RG-10). The optimized spectrograph and cryostat system will be delivered to the LBT in 2024.
Time domain astronomy has both increased the data volume and the urgency of data reduction in recent years. Spectra provide key insights into astrophysical phenomena but require complex reductions. Las Cumbres Observatory has six spectrographs - two low-dispersion FLOYDS instruments and four NRES high-resolution echelle spectrographs. We present an extension of the data reduction framework, BANZAI, to process spectra automatically, with no human interaction. We also present interactive tools we have developed for human vetting and improvement of the spectroscopic reduction. Tools like those presented here are essential to maximize the scientific yield from current and future time domain astronomy.
Las Cumbres Observatory comprises 25 robotic telescopes hosting 6 instrument types at 7 sites. To manage the calibrations for such a large suite of instruments, LCO has developed a Target and Observation Manager (TOM) built on elements of the TOM Toolkit. In the Calibration-TOM, the fundamental assets to be managed are not astronomical targets (as with a TOM built for a science campaign) but the telescopes and instruments of the observatory. The Calibration-TOM is a web application that uses python code within a Django framework. Requests for recurring, nighttime calibrations are described by dynamic cadences, which are inserted into each instrument’s schedule with specified durations. In 2021, we began using the Calibration-TOM for observations of flux and RV standards for the NRES spectrographs, as well as for observations of photometric standards for all imagers. The Calibration-TOM makes the scheduling and outcomes of calibrations more transparent to operations personnel, expediting the identification of underperforming instruments. Other observatories supporting multiple instruments may benefit from creating similar TOM software.
We report the development of MuSCAT3, a four channel simultaneous imager installed on the 2m Faulkes Telescope North at Haleakala Observatory on Maui, Hawai’i. MuSCAT3 has a capability of 4-color simultaneous imaging in g (400–550 nm), r (550–700 nm), i (700–820 nm), and zs (820–920 nm) bands with four independent 2048×2048 pixel CCDs, each having a field of view of 9.1×9.1 arcmin2 with a pixel scale of 0.27 arcsec per pixel. The development of MuSCAT3 started from September 2019, and MuSCAT3 achieved its first light on September 28th, 2020. The Las Cumbres Observatory started science operations of MuSCAT3 since November 4th, 2020, although a part of its capabilities are still limited.
PEPSI is the new fiber-fed and stabilized “Potsdam Echelle Polarimetric and Spectroscopic Instrument” for the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). It covers the entire optical wavelength range from 384 to 913 nm in three exposures at resolutions of either R=λ/▵λ=50,000, 130,000 or 250,000. The R=130,000 mode can also be used with two dual-beam Stokes IQUV polarimeters. The 50,000-mode with its 12-pix sampling per resolution element is our “bad seeing” or “faint-object” mode. A robotic solar-disk-integration (SDI) telescope feeds solar light to PEPSI during day time and a 450-m fiber feed from the 1.8m VATT can be used when the LBT is busy otherwise. CCD characterization and a removal procedure for the spatial fixed-pattern noise were the main tasks left from the commissioning phase. Several SDI spectral time series with up to 300 individual spectra per day recovered the well-known solar 5-minute oscillation at a peak of 3 mHz (5.5min) with a disk-integrated radial-velocity amplitude of only 47 cm/s. Spectral atlases for 50 bright benchmark stars including the Sun were recently released to the scientific community, among them the ancient planet- system host Kepler-444. These data combine PEPSI’s high spectral resolution of R=250,000 with signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) of many hundreds to even thousands covering the entire optical to near-infrared wavelength range from 384 to 913 nm. Other early science cases were exoplanet transits including TRAPPIST-1, a spectrum of Boyajian's star that revealed strong and structured but stable ISM Na D lines, a spectrum of Oph allowing a redetermination of the ISM Li line doublet, and a first Doppler image of the young solar analog EK Dra that revealed starspots with solar-like penumbrae.
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