143 research outputs found
Adaptive Optics observations of LBQS 0108+0028: K-band detection of the host galaxy of a radio-quiet QSO at z=2
We report the first unambiguous detection of the host galaxy of a normal
radio-quiet QSO at high-redshift in K-band. The luminosity of the host
comprises about 35% of the total K-band luminosity. Assuming the average colour
of QSOs at z=2, the host would be about 5 to 6 mag brighter than an unevolved
L* galaxy placed at z=2, and 3 to 4 mag brighter than a passively evolved L*
galaxy at the same redshift. The luminosity of the host galaxy of the QSO would
thus overlap with the highest found in radio-loud QSOs and radio-galaxies at
the same redshift.Comment: Accepted to be published in MNRAS. 4 pages, 2 postscript figures.
Also available at http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~itzia
The GraF instrument for imaging spectroscopy with the adaptive optics
The GraF instrument using a Fabry-Perot interferometer cross-dispersed with a
grating was one of the first integral-field and long-slit spectrographs built
for and used with an adaptive optics system. We describe its concept, design,
optimal observational procedures and the measured performances. The instrument
was used in 1997-2001 at the ESO 3.6 m telescope equipped with ADONIS adaptive
optics and SHARPII+ camera. The operating spectral range was 1.2 - 2.5 microns.
We used the spectral resolution from 500 to 10 000 combined with the angular
resolution of 0.1" - 0.2". The quality of GraF data is illustrated by the
integral field spectroscopy of the complex 0.9" x 0.9" central region of Eta
Car in the 1.7 microns spectral range at the limit of spectral and angular
resolutions.Comment: 36 pages, 12 figures, accepted by Ex
The science case for the Next Generation AO system at W. M. Keck Observatory
The W. M. Keck Observatory is designing a new adaptive optics system providing precision AO correction in the near infrared, good correction at visible wavelengths, and multiplexed spatially resolved spectroscopy. We discuss science cases for this Next Generation AO (NGAO), and show how the system requirements were derived from these science cases. Key science drivers include asteroid companions, planets around low-mass stars, general relativistic effects around the Galactic Center black hole, nearby active galactic nuclei, and high-redshift galaxies (including galaxies lensed by intervening galaxies or clusters). The multi-object AO-corrected integral field spectrograph will be optimized for high-redshift galaxy science
Calibration of quasi-static aberrations in exoplanet direct-imaging instruments with a Zernike phase-mask sensor. II. Concept validation with ZELDA on VLT/SPHERE
Warm or massive gas giant planets, brown dwarfs, and debris disks around
nearby stars are now routinely observed by dedicated high-contrast imaging
instruments on large, ground-based observatories. These facilities include
extreme adaptive optics (ExAO) and state-of-the-art coronagraphy to achieve
unprecedented sensitivities for exoplanet detection and spectral
characterization. However, differential aberrations between the ExAO sensing
path and the science path represent a critical limitation for the detection of
giant planets with a contrast lower than a few at very small
separations (<0.3\as) from their host star. In our previous work, we proposed a
wavefront sensor based on Zernike phase contrast methods to circumvent this
issue and measure these quasi-static aberrations at a nanometric level. We
present the design, manufacturing and testing of ZELDA, a prototype that was
installed on VLT/SPHERE during its reintegration in Chile. Using the internal
light source of the instrument, we performed measurements in the presence of
Zernike or Fourier modes introduced with the deformable mirror. Our
experimental and simulation results are consistent, confirming the ability of
our sensor to measure small aberrations (<50 nm rms) with nanometric accuracy.
We then corrected the long-lived non-common path aberrations in SPHERE based on
ZELDA measurements. We estimated a contrast gain of 10 in the coronagraphic
image at 0.2\as, reaching the raw contrast limit set by the coronagraph in the
instrument. The simplicity of the design and its phase reconstruction algorithm
makes ZELDA an excellent candidate for the on-line measurements of quasi-static
aberrations during the observations. The implementation of a ZELDA-based
sensing path on the current and future facilities (ELTs, future space missions)
could ease the observation of the cold gaseous or massive rocky planets around
nearby stars.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, A&A accepted on June 3rd, 2016. v2 after
language editin
Keck Observatory Laser Guide Star Adaptive Optics Discovery and Characterization of a Satellite to the Large Kuiper Belt Object 2003 EL_(61)
The newly commissioned laser guide star adaptive optics system at Keck Observatory has been used to discover and characterize the orbit of a satellite to the bright Kuiper Belt object 2003 EL_(61). Observations over a 6 month period show that the satellite has a semimajor axis of 49,500 ± 400 km, an orbital period of 49.12 ± 0.03 days, and an eccentricity of 0.050 ± 0.003. The inferred mass of the system is (4.2 ± 0.1) × 10^(21) kg, or ~32% of the mass of Pluto and 28.6% ± 0.7% of the mass of the Pluto-Charon system. Mutual occultations occurred in 1999 and will not occur again until 2138. The orbit is fully consistent neither with one tidally evolved from an earlier closer configuration nor with one evolved inward by dynamical friction from an earlier more distant configuration
The science case for the Next Generation AO system at W. M. Keck Observatory
The W. M. Keck Observatory is designing a new adaptive optics system providing precision AO correction in the near infrared, good correction at visible wavelengths, and multiplexed spatially resolved spectroscopy. We discuss science cases for this Next Generation AO (NGAO), and show how the system requirements were derived from these science cases. Key science drivers include asteroid companions, planets around low-mass stars, general relativistic effects around the Galactic Center black hole, nearby active galactic nuclei, and high-redshift galaxies (including galaxies lensed by intervening galaxies or clusters). The multi-object AO-corrected integral field spectrograph will be optimized for high-redshift galaxy science
Adaptive Optics Imaging of IRAS 18276-1431: a bipolar pre-planetary nebula with circumstellar "searchlight beams" and "arcs"
We present high-angular resolution images of the post-AGB nebula
IRAS18276-1431 (also known as OH17.7-2.0) obtained with the Keck II Adaptive
Optics (AO) system in its Natural Guide Star (NGS) mode in the Kp, Lp, and Ms
near-infrared bands. We also present supporting optical F606W and F814W HST
images as well as interferometric observations of the 12CO(J=1-0), 13CO(J=1-0),
and 2.6mm continuum emission with OVRO. The envelope of IRAS18276-1431 displays
a clear bipolar morphology in our optical and NIR images with two lobes
separated by a dark waist and surrounded by a faint 4.5"x3.4" halo. Our Kp-band
image reveals two pairs of radial ``searchlight beams'' emerging from the
nebula center and several intersecting, arc-like features. From our CO data we
derive a mass of M>0.38[D/3kpc]^2 Msun and an expansion velocity v_exp=17km/s
for the molecular envelope. The density in the halo follows a radial power-law
proportional to r^-3, which is consistent with a mass-loss rate increasing with
time. Analysis of the NIR colors indicates the presence of a compact central
source of ~300-500K dust illuminating the nebula in addition to the central
star. Modeling of the thermal IR suggests a two-shell structure in the dust
envelope: 1) an outer shell with inner and outer radius R_in~1.6E16cm and
R_out>~1.25E17cm, dust temperature T_d~105-50K, and a mean mass-loss rate of
Mdot~1E-3Msun/yr; and 2) an inner shell with R_in~6.3E14cm, T_dust~500-105K,
and Mdot~3E-5Msun/yr. An additional population of big dust grains (radius
a>~0.4mm) with T_dust=150-20K and mass M_dust=(0.16-1.6)E-3 [D/3kpc]^2 Msun can
account for the observed sub-mm and mm flux excess. The mass of the envelope
enclosed within R_out=1.25E17cm derived from SED modeling is ~1[D/3kpc]^2 Msun.Comment: 46 pages, 14 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ.
Figures 12 & 13 in low resolution. Full resolution versions are available
upon request to the first autho
Satellites of the largest Kuiper Belt objects
We have searched the four brightest objects in the Kuiper Belt for the presence of satellites using the newly commissioned Keck Observatory Laser Guide Star Adaptive Optics system. Satellites are seen around three of the four objects: Pluto (whose satellite Charon is well-known and whose recently discovered smaller satellites are too faint to be detected), 2003 EL61 (where a second satellite is seen in addition to the previously known satellite), and 2003 UB313 (where a satellite is seen for the first time). The object 2005 FY9, the brightest Kuiper Belt object (KBO) after Pluto, does not have a satellite detectable within 0".4 with a brightness of more than 1% of the primary. The presence of satellites around three of the four brightest KBOs is inconsistent with the fraction of satellites in the Kuiper Belt at large at the 99.2% confidence level, suggesting a different formation mechanism for these largest KBO satellites. The two satellites of 2003 EL61, and the one satellite of 2003 UB313, with fractional brightnesses of 5% and 1.5%, and 2%, of their primaries, respectively, are significantly fainter relative to their primaries than other known KBO satellites, again pointing to possible differences in their origin
Variable Infrared Emission from the Supermassive Black Hole at the Center of the Milky Way
We report the detection of a variable point source, imaged at L'(3.8 microns)
with the W. M. Keck II 10-meter telescope's adaptive optics system, that is
coincident to within 18 mas of the Galaxy's central supermassive black hole and
the unique radio source Sgr A*. While in 2002 this source (SgrA*-IR) was
confused with the stellar source S0-2, in 2003 these two sources are separated
by 87 mas allowing the new source's properties to be determined directly. On
four separate nights, its observed L' magnitude ranges from 12.2 to 13.8, which
corresponds to a flux density of 0.7 - 3 mJy, observed, and 4 - 17 mJy,
dereddened; no other source in this region shows such large variations in flux
density - a factor of 4 over a week and a factor of 2 over 40 min. In addition,
it has a K-L' color greater than 2.1, which is at least 1 mag redder than any
other source detected at L' in its vicinity. Based on this source's coincidence
with the Galaxy's dynamical center, its lack of motion, its variability, and
its red color, we conclude that it is associated with the central supermassive
black hole. The short timescale for the 3.8 micron flux density variations
implies that the emission arises in the accretion flow on physical size scales
smaller than 5 AU, or 80 R_s for a 4x10^6 Mo black hole. We suggest that the
3.8 micron emission and the X-ray flares arise from the same underlying
physical process, possibly the acceleration of a small populations of electrons
to ultrarelativistic energies. In contrast to the X-ray flares which are only
detectable 2% of the time, the 3.8 micron emission provides a new, constantly
accessible, window into the physical conditions of the plasma in close
proximity to the central black hole.Comment: published in Astrophysical Journal Letter
- …