49 research outputs found
Physics of wind instruments an overview of studies carried out at LMA
International audienceA poster is presented with the aim of doing an overview of the research activities carried out on the physics of wind instruments at the Laboratory of Mechanics and Acoustic
Solar Contamination in Extreme-precision Radial-velocity Measurements: Deleterious Effects and Prospects for Mitigation
Solar contamination, due to moonlight and atmospheric scattering of sunlight, can cause systematic errors in stellar radial velocity (RV) measurements that significantly detract from the ~10 cm s−1 sensitivity required for the detection and characterization of terrestrial exoplanets in or near habitable zones of Sun-like stars. The addition of low-level spectral contamination at variable effective velocity offsets introduces systematic noise when measuring velocities using classical mask-based or template-based cross-correlation techniques. Here we present simulations estimating the range of RV measurement error induced by uncorrected scattered sunlight contamination. We explore potential correction techniques, using both simultaneous spectrometer sky fibers and broadband imaging via coherent fiber imaging bundles, that could reliably reduce this source of error to below the photon-noise limit of typical stellar observations. We discuss the limitations of these simulations, the underlying assumptions, and mitigation mechanisms. We also present and discuss the components designed and built into the NEID (NN-EXPLORE Exoplanet Investigations with Doppler spectroscopy) precision RV instrument for the WIYN 3.5 m telescope, to serve as an ongoing resource for the community to explore and evaluate correction techniques. We emphasize that while "bright time" has been traditionally adequate for RV science, the goal of 10 cm s−1 precision on the most interesting exoplanetary systems may necessitate access to darker skies for these next-generation instruments
Detection of p-mode Oscillations in HD 35833 with NEID and TESS
We report the results of observations of p-mode oscillations in the G0
subgiant star HD 35833 in both radial velocities and photometry with NEID and
TESS, respectively. We achieve separate, robust detections of the oscillation
signal with both instruments (radial velocity amplitude m s, photometric amplitude
ppm, frequency of maximum power Hz, and
mode spacing Hz) as well as a non-detection in
a TESS sector concurrent with the NEID observations. These data shed light on
our ability to mitigate the correlated noise impact of oscillations with radial
velocities alone, and on the robustness of commonly used asteroseismic scaling
relations. The NEID data are used to validate models for the attenuation of
oscillation signals for exposure times , and we compare
our results to predictions from theoretical scaling relations and find that the
observed amplitudes are weaker than expected by , hinting at gaps in
the underlying physical models.Comment: 19 Pages, 14 Figures, Appendi
The NEID Precision Radial Velocity Spectrometer: Port Adapter Overview, Requirements, and Test Plan
The NEID spectrometer is an optical (380-930 nm), fiber-fed, precision Doppler spectrometer currently in development for the WIYN 3.5 m telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory as part of the NN-EXPLORE partnership. Designed to achieve a radial velocity precision of < 30 cm/s, NEID will be sensitive enough to detect terrestrial-mass exoplanets around low-mass stars. Light from the target stars is focused by the telescope to a bent Cassegrain port at the edge of the primary mirror mechanical support. The specialized NEID "Port Adapter" system is mounted at this bent Cassegrain port and is responsible for delivering the incident light from the telescope to the NEID fibers. In order to provide stable, high-quality images to the science instrument, the Port Adapter houses several sub-components designed to acquire the target stars, correct for atmospheric dispersion, stabilize the light onto the science fibers, and calibrate the spectrometer by injecting known wavelength sources such as a laser frequency comb. Here we provide an overview of the overall opto-mechanical design and system requirements of the Port Adapter. We also describe the development of system error budgets and testplans to meet those requirements
Solar Contamination in Extreme-precision Radial-velocity Measurements: Deleterious Effects and Prospects for Mitigation
Solar contamination, due to moonlight and atmospheric scattering of sunlight, can cause systematic errors in stellar radial velocity (RV) measurements that significantly detract from the ~10 cm s−1 sensitivity required for the detection and characterization of terrestrial exoplanets in or near habitable zones of Sun-like stars. The addition of low-level spectral contamination at variable effective velocity offsets introduces systematic noise when measuring velocities using classical mask-based or template-based cross-correlation techniques. Here we present simulations estimating the range of RV measurement error induced by uncorrected scattered sunlight contamination. We explore potential correction techniques, using both simultaneous spectrometer sky fibers and broadband imaging via coherent fiber imaging bundles, that could reliably reduce this source of error to below the photon-noise limit of typical stellar observations. We discuss the limitations of these simulations, the underlying assumptions, and mitigation mechanisms. We also present and discuss the components designed and built into the NEID (NN-EXPLORE Exoplanet Investigations with Doppler spectroscopy) precision RV instrument for the WIYN 3.5 m telescope, to serve as an ongoing resource for the community to explore and evaluate correction techniques. We emphasize that while "bright time" has been traditionally adequate for RV science, the goal of 10 cm s−1 precision on the most interesting exoplanetary systems may necessitate access to darker skies for these next-generation instruments
Solar Contamination in Extreme Precision Radial Velocity Measurements: Deleterious Effects and Prospects for Mitigation
Solar contamination, due to moonlight and atmospheric scattering of sunlight,
can cause systematic errors in stellar radial velocity (RV) measurements that
significantly detract from the ~10cm/s sensitivity required for the detection
and characterization of terrestrial exoplanets in or near Habitable Zones of
Sun-like stars. The addition of low-level spectral contamination at variable
effective velocity offsets introduces systematic noise when measuring
velocities using classical mask-based or template-based cross-correlation
techniques. Here we present simulations estimating the range of RV measurement
error induced by uncorrected scattered sunlight contamination. We explore
potential correction techniques, using both simultaneous spectrometer sky
fibers and broadband imaging via coherent fiber imaging bundles, that could
reliably reduce this source of error to below the photon-noise limit of typical
stellar observations. We discuss the limitations of these simulations, the
underlying assumptions, and mitigation mechanisms. We also present and discuss
the components designed and built into the NEID precision RV instrument for the
WIYN 3.5m telescope, to serve as an ongoing resource for the community to
explore and evaluate correction techniques. We emphasize that while "bright
time" has been traditionally adequate for RV science, the goal of 10cm/s
precision on the most interesting exoplanetary systems may necessitate access
to darker skies for these next-generation instruments
Stable fiber-illumination for extremely precise radial velocities with NEID
NEID is a high-resolution red-optical precision radial velocity (RV)
spectrograph recently commissioned at the WIYN 3.5 m telescope at Kitt Peak
National Observatory, Arizona, USA. NEID has an extremely stable environmental
control system, and spans a wavelength range of 380 to 930 nm with two
observing modes: a High Resolution (HR) mode at R 112,000 for maximum RV
precision, and a High Efficiency (HE) mode at R 72,000 for faint
targets. In this manuscript we present a detailed description of the components
of NEID's optical fiber feed, which include the instrument, exposure meter,
calibration system, and telescope fibers. Many parts of the optical fiber feed
can lead to uncalibratable RV errors, which cannot be corrected for using a
stable wavelength reference source. We show how these errors directly cascade
down to performance requirements on the fiber feed and the scrambling system.
We detail the design, assembly, and testing of each component. Designed and
built from the bottom-up with a single-visit instrument precision requirement
of 27 , close attention was paid to the error contribution
from each NEID subsystem. Finally, we include the lab and on-sky tests
performed during instrument commissioning to test the illumination stability,
and discuss the path to achieving the instrumental stability required to search
for a true Earth twin around a Solar-type star.Comment: Accepted in A
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