MIMIZUKU is a mid-infrared instrument for the TAO 6.5-m telescope under construction in the Atacama Desert, Chile, and will be the world’s first mid-infrared monitoring observation station. We aim to achieve a photometric accuracy of 1%. For this purpose, highly accurate flat fielding with an accuracy of 0.1% is needed. Although flat fielding has been conducted using sky images and dark images conventionally, the correction has uncertainties of several percent. The reason is that the non-linearity of the detector is not considered. To improve this, it is necessary to create flat frames from data in the same count level as during observation. Highly accurate flat frames were derived by taking differential counts against the time variation of the atmospheric radiation. However, this method cannot be used under stable conditions suitable for observations. Therefore, we developed a flat calibration unit which irradiates the detector uniformly and vary the irradiation intensity with time to enable the improved flat fielding under any conditions. We designed the unit that irradiates the detector uniformly by placing a silicon lens and a blackbody source in front of the camera. The blackbody source is put at the pupil position of the optical system. We made some tests to create flat images with the unit. By improving flat fielding, we have successfully corrected for patterns originating from the detector, which appeared in the conventional one. We also clarified that the accuracy of the improved flat fielding was 0.29%, while the accuracy of the conventional one was 1.3%.
Cold choppers are fast beam-switching tip-tilt mirrors installed in the cold optics of mid-infrared instruments. They enable chopping observations, required for ground-based mid-infrared observations to subtract the bright background radiation, without moving telescope mirrors. In the era of next-generation extremely large telescopes, the telescope mirrors cannot be moved due to the size. Therefore, cold choppers are a key technology for groundbased mid-infrared instruments for such large telescopes. In this study, we develop a prototype cold chopper for TAO/MIMIZUKU, the mid-infrared instrument for the TAO 6.5-m telescope, and evaluate the performance in a cryogenic environment at 20 K. It is confirmed that the prototype shows almost the same response as at room temperature and achieves 2-axis square-wave motion with an amplitude of 0.84 deg, a settling time of ∼40 ms, and a frequency of ≥2 Hz. The evaluated power dissipation is ∼5mW. Stability is found to be slightly worse than required (6 × 10−4 deg) due to mechanical vibration caused by the cryocooler used in the experiment. We plan to mount this chopper on MIMIZUKU to check the effects of such vibrations in the on-board environment.
MIMIZUKU is the first-generation mid-infrared instrument for the TAO 6.5-m telescope. It has three internal optical channels to cover a wide wavelength range from 2 to 38 µm. Of the three channels, the NIR channel is responsible for observations in the shortest wavelength range, shorter than 5.3 µm. The performance of the NIR channel is evaluated in the laboratory. Through the tests, we confirm the followings: 1) the detector (HAWAII 1RG with 5.3-µm cutoff) likely achieves ∼80% quantum efficiency; 2) imaging performance is sufficient to achieve seeing-limit spatial resolution; 3) system efficiencies in imaging mode are 2.4–31%; and 4) the system efficiencies in spectroscopic modes is 5–18%. These results suggest that the optical performance of the NIR channel is achieved as expected from characteristics of the optical components. However, calculations of the background levels and on-sky sensitivity based on these results suggest that neutral density (ND) filters are needed to avoid saturation in L ′ - and M′ -band observations and that the ND filters and the entrance window, made of chemical-vapor-deposition (CVD) diamond, significantly degrade the sensitivity in these bands. This means that the use of different window materials and improvements of the detector readout speed are required to achieve both near-infrared and long-wavelength mid-infrared (>30 µm) observations.
An internal cold chopper is one of the key elements for the ground-based mid-infrared astronomical instruments of the next generation large telescopes such as TMT, GMT, and ELT. For ground-based mid-infrared observations, time variations of radiation from atmosphere, telescope, and instrument are often many times greater than the radiation from targets. Relatively fast (~5 Hz) beam switching technique (chopping) using the oscillating secondary mirror is often used for 8-m class telescopes to remove these background variations, but this is impractical for the 30-m class telescopes due to their much larger secondary mirror. Instead of it, internal chopping mirror is desired for the next generation groundbased mid-infrared astronomy. However, since the mid-IR instruments are usually cooled as low as ~30 K, such internal chopping mirror should also be cooled to that low temperature and low power dissipation of <1 W is required to maintain the low temperature environment, thus it is not so easy to have such cold chopper. As a testbed for that, we are developing an internal cold chopper for the mid-infrared instrument MIMIZUKU for the University of Tokyo Atacama Observatory (TAO) 6.5-m telescope. We use a voice-coil-like structure as actuators and capacitive gap sensors as position sensors. We construct a feedback control system for the rectangular command signal. We made a prototype cold chopper for TAO/MIMIZUKU and are currently evaluating this system. We present the current design of the cold chopper for MIMIZUKU and results of performance evaluation in the laboratory.
The Simultaneous-color Wide-field Infrared Multi-object Spectrograph (SWIMS) is one of the 1st generation facility instruments for the University of Tokyo Atacama Observatory (TAO) 6.5 m telescope currently being constructed at the summit of Cerro Chajnantor (5,640 m altitude) in northern Chile. SWIMS has two optical arms, the blue arm covering 0.9–1.4 µm and the red 1.4–2.5 µm, by inserting a dichroic mirror into the collimated beam, and thus is capable of taking images in two filter-bands simultaneously in imaging mode, or whole nearinfrared (0.9–2.5 µm) low-to-medium resolution multi-object spectra in spectroscopy (MOS) mode, both with a single exposure. SWIMS was carried into Subaru Telescope in 2017 for performance evaluation prior to completion of the construction of the 6.5 m telescope, and successfully saw the imaging first light in May 2018 and MOS first light in Jan 2019. After three engineering runs including the first light observations, SWIMS has been accepted as a new PI instrument for Subaru Telescope from the semester S21A until S22B. In this paper, we report on details of on-sky performance of the instrument evaluated during the engineering observations for a total of 7.5 nights.
‘Field Stacker’ is a unique system mounted on MIMIZUKU, a mid-infrared instrument for the TAO 6.5-m telescope. This system obtains a pair of distant targets simultaneously and aims at performing relative photometry with an accuracy of a few percent. A key to achieve the accurate relative photometry is precise flat fielding. We have developed a new method for the flat fielding using time variation of the sky background. We analyzed the data obtained in an engineering observation at the Subaru in 2018. The error of the flat fielding and the total error propagated from the flat fielding are estimated to be 0.2–0.3% and 0.5%, respectively.
The Mid-Infrared Multi-field Imager for gaZing at the UnKnown Universe (MIMIZUKU) is developed as the first-generation mid-infrared instrument for the University of Tokyo Atacama Observatory (TAO) 6.5-m telescope. MIMIZUKU performs medium-band imaging and low-resolution spectroscopy in 2-38 microns and enables highest-spatial-resolution observations in the long-wavelength mid-infrared beyond 25 microns. In addition, MIMIZUKU has a unique opto-mechanical device called ‘Field Stacker’, which enables us to observe a distant (<25 arcminutes) pair of target and reference objects simultaneously and improves accuracy of atmospheric calibration. This function is expected to improve photometric accuracy and quality of spectroscopic data even in the long-wavelength mid-infrared regions, where the atmospheric absorption is severe. In 2018, engineering observations of MIMIZUKU were carried out at the Subaru telescope, and its first-light was successfully achieved. In the engineering observations, the imaging and spectroscopic functions in the mid-infrared wavelengths (7.6-25 microns) were confirmed to be working almost as expected, although the sensitivity is still worse than the background-limited performance by a factor of a few due to high readout noise. The Field Stacker was also confirmed to be working as expected. It is confirmed that the photometric instability can be reduced to a few percent by using Field Stacker even when the atmospheric transmittance varies by 10% in time. It is also confirmed that spectroscopic observations can be performed not only in 10-micron band but also in 20-micron band, where the spectroscopic observations are difficult even at the Mauna Kea site. We report the results of these on-sky performance evaluations.
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