13 research outputs found
Neolithisches Erdwerk oder Gelifluktionsloben? Archäologische und geowissenschaftliche Forschungen an einem geomagnetischen Befund aus Holzhausen, Ldkr. Oldenburg
Near Holzhausen in the District of Oldenburg, geomagnetic anomalies were detected by geomagnetic surveys. In view of the size and the concentric shape that emerged from the anomalies, the resulting structure was interpreted as an enclosure. To confirm this assumption, an archaeological excavation was carried out in 2010 and 2011. Due to the fact that the anomalies and the structure could not be satisfactorily explained by this, additional pedological and geological investigations were conducted. The result that the anomalies were generated by geological structures shows that the interpretation of geomagnetic measurements – in spite of good analogies – is limited without further field investigations
Recovering simulated planet and disk signals using SCALES aperture masking
The Slicer Combined with Array of Lenslets for Exoplanet Spectroscopy
(SCALES) instrument is a lenslet-based integral field spectrograph that will
operate at 2 to 5 microns, imaging and characterizing colder (and thus older)
planets than current high-contrast instruments. Its spatial resolution for
distant science targets and/or close-in disks and companions could be improved
via interferometric techniques such as sparse aperture masking. We introduce a
nascent Python package, NRM-artist, that we use to design several SCALES masks
to be non-redundant and to have uniform coverage in Fourier space. We generate
high-fidelity mock SCALES data using the scalessim package for SCALES' low
spectral resolution modes across its 2 to 5 micron bandpass. We include
realistic noise from astrophysical and instrument sources, including Keck
adaptive optics and Poisson noise. We inject planet and disk signals into the
mock datasets and subsequently recover them to test the performance of SCALES
sparse aperture masking and to determine the sensitivity of various mask
designs to different science signals
Simulating medium-spectral-resolution exoplanet characterization with SCALES angular/reference differential imaging
SCALES (Slicer Combined with Array of Lenslets for Exoplanet Spectroscopy) is
a 2 - 5 micron high-contrast lenslet-based integral field spectrograph (IFS)
designed to characterize exoplanets and their atmospheres. The SCALES
medium-spectral-resolution mode uses a lenslet subarray with a 0.34 x 0.36
arcsecond field of view which allows for exoplanet characterization at
increased spectral resolution. We explore the sensitivity limitations of this
mode by simulating planet detections in the presence of realistic noise
sources. We use the SCALES simulator scalessim to generate high-fidelity mock
observations of planets that include speckle noise from their host stars, as
well as other atmospheric and instrumental noise effects. We employ both
angular and reference differential imaging as methods of disentangling speckle
noise from the injected planet signals. These simulations allow us to assess
the feasibility of speckle deconvolution for SCALES medium resolution data, and
to test whether one approach outperforms another based on planet angular
separations and contrasts
Design of SCALES: a 2-5 micron coronagraphic integral field spectrograph for Keck Observatory
editorial reviewedWe present the design of SCALES (Slicer Combined with Array of Lenslets for Exoplanet Spectroscopy) a new 2-5 micron coronagraphic integral field spectrograph under construction for Keck Observatory. SCALES enables low-resolution (R∼50) spectroscopy, as well as medium-resolution (R∼4,000) spectroscopy with the goal of discovering and characterizing cold exoplanets that are brightest in the thermal infrared. Additionally, SCALES has a 12x12" field-of-view imager that will be used for general adaptive optics science at Keck. We present SCALES's specifications, its science case, its overall design, and simulations of its expected performance. Additionally, we present progress on procuring, fabricating and testing long lead-time components
AtLAST Science Overview Report
International audienceSubmillimeter and millimeter wavelengths provide a unique view of the Universe, from the gas and dust that fills and surrounds galaxies to the chromosphere of our own Sun. Current single-dish facilities have presented a tantalising view of the brightest (sub-)mm sources, and interferometers have provided the exquisite resolution necessary to analyse the details in small fields, but there are still many open questions that cannot be answered with current facilities. In this report we summarise the science that is guiding the design of the Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST). We demonstrate how tranformational advances in topics including star formation in high redshift galaxies, the diffuse circumgalactic medium, Galactic ecology, cometary compositions and solar flares motivate the need for a 50m, single-dish telescope with a 1-2 degree field of view and a new generation of highly multiplexed continuum and spectral cameras. AtLAST will have the resolution to drastically lower the confusion limit compared to current single-dish facilities, whilst also being able to rapidly map large areas of the sky and detect extended, diffuse structures. Its high sensitivity and large field of view will open up the field of submillimeter transient science by increasing the probability of serendipitous detections. Finally, the science cases listed here motivate the need for a highly flexible operations model capable of short observations of individual targets, large surveys, monitoring programmes, target of opportunity observations and coordinated observations with other observatories. AtLAST aims to be a sustainable, upgradeable, multipurpose facility that will deliver orders of magnitude increases in sensitivity and mapping speeds over current and planned submillimeter observatories