11 research outputs found
Evidence for He I 10830 \AA~ absorption during the transit of a warm Neptune around the M-dwarf GJ 3470 with the Habitable-zone Planet Finder
Understanding the dynamics and kinematics of out-flowing atmospheres of hot
and warm exoplanets is crucial to understanding the origins and evolutionary
history of the exoplanets near the evaporation desert. Recently, ground based
measurements of the meta-stable Helium atom's resonant absorption at 10830
\AA~has become a powerful probe of the base environment which is driving the
outflow of exoplanet atmospheres. We report evidence for the He I 10830 \AA~in
absorption (equivalent width \AA) in the exosphere of
a warm Neptune orbiting the M-dwarf GJ 3470, during three transits using the
Habitable Zone Planet Finder (HPF) near infrared spectrograph. This marks the
first reported evidence for He I 10830 \AA\, atmospheric absorption for a
planet orbiting an M-dwarf. Our detected absorption is broad and its
blueshifted wing extends to -36 km/sec, the largest reported in the literature
to date. We modelled the state of Helium atoms in the exosphere of GJ3470b
based on assumptions on the UV and X-ray flux of GJ 3470, and found our
measurement of flux-weighted column density of meta-stable state Helium
, derived from our transit
observations, to be consistent with model, within its uncertainties. The
methodology developed here will be useful to study and constrain the
atmospheric outflow models of other exoplanets like GJ 3470b which are near the
edge of the evaporation desert.Comment: Accepted in Ap
Ghosts of NEID's Past
The NEID spectrograph is a R 120,000 resolution fiber-fed and highly
stabilized spectrograph for extreme radial velocity (RV) precision. It is being
commissioned at the 3.5 m WIYN telescope in Kitt Peak National Observatory with
a desired instrumental precision of better than 30 \cms{}. NEID's bandpass of
380 -- 930 nm enables the simultaneous wavelength coverage of activity
indicators from the Ca HK lines in the blue to the Ca IR triplet in the IR. In
this paper we will present our efforts to characterize and mitigate optical
ghosts in the NEID spectrograph during assembly, integration and testing, and
highlight several of the dominant optical element contributors such as the
cross dispersion prism and input optics. We shall present simulations of the
2-D spectrum and discuss the predicted ghost features on the focal plane, and
how they may impact the RV performance for NEID. We also present the mitigation
strategy adopted for each ghost which may be applied to future instrument
designs. This work will enable other instrument builders to potentially avoid
some of these issues, as well as outline mitigation strategies.Comment: Conference Proceeding from SPIE Astronomical Telescopes +
Instrumentation (2020): 12 page
The NEID spectrometer: fibre injection system design
NEID is a high resolution echelle spectrograph designed to enable extremely precise Doppler radial velocity observations of stars in the 380-930nm wavelength range1. It has recently been installed at the 3.5m WIYN telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory, and is currently being commissioned. The design is based on a white pupil layout with a monolithic parabolic primary mirror and a 195mm pupil size on the R4 Echelle grating. Here we describe the optical and mechanical design, assembly, and alignment of the fiber injection system which converts the native focal ratio of the sky, calibration, and science fibers to the focal ratio required to form the 195mm collimated beam
A solar feed for NEID
NEID is a radial velocity (RV) instrument including an ultra-stabilized fiber-fed spectrograph, installed in 2019 at the 3.5m WIYN telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory. Accompanying it is a solar feed system built to supply the spectrograph with disk-integrated sunlight. Observing the Sun “as a star” is essential for developing and validating mitigation strategies for RV variations due to stellar activity and instrument systematics, thus enabling more-effective detections of lower-mass exoplanets. In this paper, we will detail the design of the NEID solar feed system and showcase early results addressing NEID systematics and solar RV variability
Evidence for He I 10830 Å Absorption during the Transit of a Warm Neptune around the M-dwarf GJ 3470 with the Habitable-zone Planet Finder
Understanding the dynamics and kinematics of outflowing atmospheres of hot and warm exoplanets is crucial to understanding the origins and evolutionary history of the exoplanets near the evaporation desert. Recently, ground-based measurements of the meta-stable helium atom's resonant absorption at 10830 Å has become a powerful probe of the base environment which is driving the outflow of exoplanet atmospheres. We report evidence for the He I 10830 Å in absorption (equivalent width ~0.012 ± 0.002 Å) in the exosphere of a warm Neptune orbiting the M-dwarf GJ 3470, during three transits using the Habitable Zone Planet Finder near-infrared spectrograph. This marks the first reported evidence for He I 10830 Å atmospheric absorption for a planet orbiting an M-dwarf. Our detected absorption is broad and its blueshifted wing extends to −36 km s⁻¹, the largest reported in the literature to date. We modeled the state of helium atoms in the exosphere of GJ3470b based on assumptions on the UV and X-ray flux of GJ 3470, and found our measurement of flux-weighted column density of meta-stable state helium (N_(He2/3S) = 2.4×10¹⁰cm⁻²), derived from our transit observations, to be consistent with the model, within its uncertainties. The methodology developed here will be useful to study and constrain the atmospheric outflow models of other exoplanets like GJ 3470b, which are near the edge of the evaporation desert
Ultra-Stable Environment Control for the NEID Spectrometer: Design and Performance Demonstration
Two key areas of emphasis in contemporary experimental exoplanet science are
the detailed characterization of transiting terrestrial planets, and the search
for Earth analog planets to be targeted by future imaging missions. Both of
these pursuits are dependent on an order-of-magnitude improvement in the
measurement of stellar radial velocities (RV), setting a requirement on
single-measurement instrumental uncertainty of order 10 cm/s. Achieving such
extraordinary precision on a high-resolution spectrometer requires
thermo-mechanically stabilizing the instrument to unprecedented levels. Here,
we describe the Environment Control System (ECS) of the NEID Spectrometer,
which will be commissioned on the 3.5 m WIYN Telescope at Kitt Peak National
Observatory in 2019, and has a performance specification of on-sky RV precision
< 50 cm/s. Because NEID's optical table and mounts are made from aluminum,
which has a high coefficient of thermal expansion, sub-milliKelvin temperature
control is especially critical. NEID inherits its ECS from that of the
Habitable-zone Planet Finder (HPF), but with modifications for improved
performance and operation near room temperature. Our full-system stability test
shows the NEID system exceeds the already impressive performance of HPF,
maintaining vacuum pressures below Torr and an RMS temperature
stability better than 0.4 mK over 30 days. Our ECS design is fully open-source;
the design of our temperature-controlled vacuum chamber has already been made
public, and here we release the electrical schematics for our custom
Temperature Monitoring and Control (TMC) system.Comment: Accepted for publication in JATI
Stellar Spectroscopy in the Near-infrared with a Laser Frequency Comb
The discovery and characterization of exoplanets around nearby stars is
driven by profound scientific questions about the uniqueness of Earth and our
Solar System, and the conditions under which life could exist elsewhere in our
Galaxy. Doppler spectroscopy, or the radial velocity (RV) technique, has been
used extensively to identify hundreds of exoplanets, but with notable
challenges in detecting terrestrial mass planets orbiting within habitable
zones. We describe infrared RV spectroscopy at the 10 m Hobby-Eberly telescope
that leverages a 30 GHz electro-optic laser frequency comb with nanophotonic
supercontinuum to calibrate the Habitable Zone Planet Finder spectrograph.
Demonstrated instrument precision <10 cm/s and stellar RVs approaching 1 m/s
open the path to discovery and confirmation of habitable zone planets around
M-dwarfs, the most ubiquitous type of stars in our Galaxy
The NEID spectrometer: fibre injection system design
NEID is a high resolution echelle spectrograph designed to enable extremely precise Doppler radial velocity observations of stars in the 380-930nm wavelength range1. It has recently been installed at the 3.5m WIYN telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory, and is currently being commissioned. The design is based on a white pupil layout with a monolithic parabolic primary mirror and a 195mm pupil size on the R4 Echelle grating. Here we describe the optical and mechanical design, assembly, and alignment of the fiber injection system which converts the native focal ratio of the sky, calibration, and science fibers to the focal ratio required to form the 195mm collimated beam