Title: Multiobject Spectroscopy
1Multiobject Spectroscopy
- Jeremy Allington-Smith
- University of Durham
2Contents
- Introduction to MOS
- Multislits and multifibres compared
- Multifibre systems
- Atmospheric effects
- Multislit systems
- Stability
- Optical performance
- Sky subtraction revisited
- Nod shuffle, microslits
- Alternatives to slit masks
3Introduction to MOS
4Basic principles
Non-contiguous sky spectrum
Object aperture
Detector
Sky
(S1)
(S1)
Sky apertures
A
A
B
B
(S2)
C
C
D
D
Spectrum of object only
Spectrum of object and contiguous sky background
(S2)
Non-contiguous sky spectrum
5Top-level requirements
- Mandatory to obtain integrated spectrum of many
objects - One spectrum per object in defined aperture
- Estimate of spectrum of sky background
- preferably contiguous in same aperture
- or enough non-contiguous samples to build global
model of sky - Known mapping from sky to detector
- obtained simply by (wavelength calibration)
- mapping need not be simple!
- Optional to obtain spatially-resolved spectra
- Spatial resolution along slit/aperture
- Apertures can be tilted or curved
- to maximise throughput for extended source
- radial velocity distribution within aperture
6Basic optical concepts
Collimator
Disperser
Camera
Multislit
Slit mask
Telescope focus
From telescope (or fore-optics)
Multifibre
Spectrograph optics
Long distance
Fibres
From telescope
Pseudo- slit
Fibre positioner
Telescope focus
(Dispersion shown rotated by 90? for simplicity)
7Multislit vs multfibres
- Multislit
- Light goes directly from aperture into
spectrograph - ? distribution of spectra on detector is the same
as that of apertures on the sky - Overlaps between spectra are possible
- Difficult to observe objects which have same
position perpendicular to the dispersion
direction - Multibre
- Light is conducted along flexible link (fibre)
- ? distribution of spectra on detector is
independent of that of apertures on the sky - Fibre outputs arranged as 'pseudo-slit' to avoid
spectrum overlaps - but fibre coupling may be lossy and destroys
spatial info
8Summary of pros and cons
- Multislit
- Efficient for faint sources
- fewer sources of light loss than fibres
- better sky subtraction - sky estimates in same
slit - limited field (?10') but fine resolution possible
(0.1") - Calibration straightforward
- Multifibre
- Very large fields possible (? 2?)
- Sky subtraction difficult - no adjacent sky
estimates - Good stability
- fibres immune to target position errors or
guiding errors - spectrograph can be gravity invariant eliminate
flexure - Calibration difficult
9Sky subtraction
- Slits give adjacent sky estimates, contiguous
with object - Fibres do not, must build global sky model or
beamswitch
A Object field B Background field
B
B
A
slit
A
Object
Fibres
Slit
10Target position errors
- Slits retain image information perpendicular to
dispersion direction - Fibres scramble information on location of object
within aperture
Centroid varies depending on position of object
within aperture of slit ? guiding/alignment
errors affect radial velocity measured
Slit
Input
Output
Centroid independent of position of object
within aperture of fibre ? guiding/alignment
errors have no effect on radial velocity measured
Fibre
11Efficiency for surveys
- Multislit suffers from spectrum overlaps but
target spacing can be small perpendicular to
dispersion direction - Multifibre does not suffer spectrum overlap, but
limited by minimum closest approach of fibres
Spectra/fibres overlap
Max density for slits
Max density for fibres
Common objects (e.g normal galaxies)
Rare objects (active galaxies)
LogSurface density of targets
Min density for slits
Min density for fibres
Fibres
Sensitivity limit
Slits
Magnitude
Too few objects in field
12Technology options
Multifibre
Multislit
Mini- bundles
Single fibres
Slit masks
Sliding slitlets
MEMS arrays
Normal
Micro-slits
mirrors
shutters
robots
spines
13Multibre systems
- This is a review of the capabilities of current
systems . Many of the technical issues which
affect these systems also apply to multislit
systems and will be discussed later
14Two-degree Field (2dF, AAT)
- Field 2? diameter via corrector at f/3 prime
focus - 400 object fibres/field plate 4 guide fibre
bundles, - Fibre aperture 140mm (2 arcsec) diameter
- Fibre positioned by pick place robot
- Double-buffered observe with one plate while the
other is configured - Atmopheric dispersion compensator
152dF
16Positioner performance
- Speed 6-7 seconds/fibre 1 hour/field ? double
buffering - Relibility one failure in every four fields
configured - Local positioning accuracy 15 mm (0.25 arcsec).
- Atmopheric refraction limits to Hour Angle /-
2.5 - Active position control image back-illuminated
fibres - Fibre cross-overs must be dealt with carefully by
s/w
172dF data Galaxy redshift survey
Each spectrograph handles 400 fibres (no overlaps)
18Flames (ESO VLT)
- OzPoz (AAO)
- double-buffered
- fibre positioner at VLT Nasmyth
- 0.1" accuracy
- 10" minimum dist.
Gravity-stable Giraffe spectrograph
Fibre input (single fibres)
Pseudoslit
19Flames fibre bundles
- Instead of 1 fibre use 20 to give image slicing
or integral field capability? next lecture
Button deployed by positioner
20"Image slicing"
- Gets both high spectral resolution and high
throughput - Can use fibres (for MOS) or little mirrors
- Don't confuse with integral field spectroscopy
- which retains spatial information (next lecture)
Slit is narrow to get high spectral resolution
but throughput is low
Reformatted slit (still narrow)
Slicing allows more light to be captured without
sacrificing spectral resolution
21Issues for multifibre system
- Can't get fibres close together
- Limits on configuration flexibility due to
cross-overs - Reconfiguration time - longer for more fibres
- Atmospheric refraction ? update fibre positions
but can't do this during observation - Calibration of fibre throughput for each plate?
- Sky subtraction strategies global
sky/beam-switch - Stability
- fibres move but spectrograph stable (not 2DF)
- guiding error immunity for fibres
22Alternative spines
- Mount fibres on spines, tilt to access small
patrol field - Natural match to studies of LSS (less good for
clusters) - Good for fast focii (PF of 8/10m) where
inter-object distance is small (f/1.2, 8m
50mm/arcsec) esp. ELTs
- Echidna (AAO) in progress for F/2 prime focus of
8m Subaru as part of UK-Aus-Japan FMOS instrument
- 400 fibres/spines
- 7mm pitch (90")
- Possible for GSMT
23Atmospheric effects
24Effect of the atmosphere
- Parallel-plane model of atmosphere gives error in
apparent position of object ("refraction") - This also has a chromatic component since
refractive index depends on wavelength
("dispersion")
25Atmospheric refraction
- Significant for wide fields and fine image scales
- Motion of images at edges of a 2x2 field
compared with 2? aperture for (1 HA) at dec
50? - Without correction, field is squashed and rotated
start
end
?sec2(ZD)
26Atmospheric refraction
- Problem - field dependent!
- Errors in radial velocity since image moves in
slit - Errors in photometry since object not centred in
slit - Solutions
- If possible observe near transit
- Limit length of observation to reduce airmass
range - Use a different mask for each range of airmass,
with slit positions allowing for refraction - Make sure Telescope Control System correctly
calculates refraction and has a correct
atmospheric model (depends on pressure and
temperature) - If possible, use two guide probes to remove
rotation empirically
27Atmospheric dispersion(differential refraction)
To zenith
If slit is horizontal, light is lost at extreme
wavelength
Airmass sec(ZD) 2
For AAT (low altitude)
Error in position if guiding at 500nm
If slit is vertical, all light is in slit, but
spectrum will be curved
?tan(ZD)
28Atmospheric dispersion
- Problem - wavelength dependent (but independent
of field) - Errors in photometry as light misses slit at
extreme wavelengths - Errors in radial velocity
- Solutions
- If possible, limit wavelength range to near
reference wavelength - Orient slit to always point to zenith -
impossible for most observations of extended
objects and usually for MOS - Make sure Telescope Control System correctly
calculates refraction and has a correct
atmospheric model (depends on pressure and
temperature) - Use an Atmospheric Dispersion Compensator
29ADC
- ADC contains a pair of prisms which rotate about
optical axis - The prisms produce no deviation at central
wavelength - Vector sum of dispersion arranged to cancel out
atmospheric dispersion
Oiled gap between prisms
GMOS design
Result from 2DF (AAO)
Slit plane
30Multislit spectrographs
31GMOS multislit example
5.5 arcmin
A383 observed with GMOS
Note extra space required on detector to
accommodate spectra
32Spectrum overlaps in MOS
Slit mask
Slit A
Slit B
Slit C
Slit D
33Spectrum overlaps in MOS
Detector
1st order
2nd order
Zero order
Slit A
Assuming that only a clean 1st-order spectrum is
required
Slit B
Slit C
Slit D
34Effect of anamorphism
Detector
1st order
2nd order
Zero order
Slit A
Slit B
Images of slit in direct image
Slit C
Slit D
35Effect of distortion
Detector
Slit A
Slit B
Slit C
Slit D
36Slit masks
- Using positions from a direct image
- eliminates astrometric errors (e.g. proper motion
of fiducials) - must account for optical distortion from mask to
detector - GMOS masks
- Minimum width 0.2 arcsec 0.12mm
- 5.5 x 5.5 arcmin mask 206 x 206mm
- 600 slits maximum/mask (200 slits/2 hours)
- Edge quality 1mm rms, position error 5mm rms
- Material 3-ply carbon fibre
37GMOS mask handling system
Masks stored in one of several cassettes
From telescope
Mask position at focal plane
38Errors in centroid of VRE
- VRE velocity resolution element,
- the monochromatic image of the slit as recorded
by the detector
Target-slit error Centroid varies depending on
position of object with respect to slit due to
guiding error or movement between telescope and
slit
Slit-detector error Centroid varies due to
movement between slit and detector
39Centroid errors
- Errors in slit position cause
- loss of throughput
- error in measured radial velocity
- Two nasty sources of astrophysical error
- plate scale error ? spurious radial dependence of
RV or intensity and overestimate of velocity
dispersion - Mask rotated with respect to targets ? errors as
above - Some causes of error
- Errors in position of target (celestial or from
image) - Error in assumed plate scale (error depends on
radius) - Inaccuracy in mask maker (random or systematic)
- Error in guiding and aligning mask with sky
during acquistion - Atmospheric refraction varying through
observation - Instability in spectrograph between slit and
detector
40Atmospheric refraction again
- Significant for wide fields and fine image scales
- Motion of images at edges of a 5.5?x5.5? field
compared with 0.3? aperture for (2 HA) at dec
80? - Image will move in slit causing velocity errors
0.3?
0.3?
Rotation corrected empirically
Rotation not corrected
41Stability
42GMOS hardware
43GMOS gravity-induced flexure
Measured raw flexure as a function of tilt about
y and z axes
- Flexure between mask and detector
- Passive 12mm/hr
- mostly elastic
- Active 3mm/hr
- CCD translated using model derived from
measurements of image of pinholes in mask
CCD translation stage
( at detector per 15-deg tilt 1 pixel
13.5 mm)
44GMOS thermal-induced flexure
Enclosure acts as thermal buffer to reduce
temperature variations
Environment induces natural temperature
variations during the night and from night to
night
- Mauna Kea -5C lt T lt 5C 95 of the time
- Gradient dT/dt lt 0.8C/hr
- Aim to reduce temp fluctuations within GMOS
enclosure to lt 0.24C/hr (0.48mm/hr at field
edge) - minimises image movement
- minimises focus changes (and plate scale changes)
- Image movement measured to be 0.62mm/hr
45Guiding and wavefront sensing
- Purpose is to keep target accurately aligned with
the slit - Flexure and thermal effects between slit and
guider must be small - Guider can be upgraded to a wavefront sensor to
provide telescope with e.g. - tip/tilt/defocus signals
GMOS OIWFS Hardware Probe in GMOS focal plane 2x2
Shack-Hartmann Performance Tip/tilt, focus
signals gt M2
astigmatism corrn gt M1 R15 tip/tilt at
100Hz Max rate 200Hz Flexure 22mas/hr on sky
OIWFS image of star
46Optical performance
47Image scale
- Image scale at slit determined by collimator
- (dx/dc )slit fT F1DT in e.g mm/arcsec
- arrange for slitwidth to be physically
manufacturable! - GMOS example F1 FT 16, DT 8m
- ? (dx/dc )slit 621mm/arcsec,
- ? 0.2 arcsec slit 124mm
- Image scale on detector determined by focal
reducer demagnification - (dx/dc )det M(dx/dc )slit F2DT since M
F2/F1 - arrange for slitwidth to project to gt 2 pixels
- GMOS example F2 4.8 so M 0.30, pixel size
13.5mm - ? (dx/dc )det 207mm/arcsec
- ? 0.2 arcsec 41.4/A mm gt 2.0 pixels for A lt 1.5
focal ratios of camera collimator
Anamorphic factor
48Image quality
- IQ must be good enough to
- adequately oversample
- the slit (Nyquist 2 pixels/slitwidth)
dispersion - the seeing (Nyquist 2 pixels/FWHM) spatial
- not degrade spatial information from telescope
- be uniform over the field
- Example for GMOS
- Image scale 0.072"/pixel cf narrowest slit (0.2
arcsec) with anamorphism - Best images delivered by site 0.25 arcsec
(10-ile) - Telescope degrades by 15
- Instrument allowed to degrade by further 10
- Calculations assume "realistic" Kolmogorov PSF
(not gaussian)
49GMOS image quality
- Image quality defined by diameter encircling
given of energy (EED) - 50EED FWHM of 2-D gaussian (36 for PSF used
for GMOS) - 85EED defines wings (100EED ? ?)
50GMOS throughput
- Throughput depends on
- main optics
- gratings
- filters
- detector
- GMOS example
51Better sky subtraction? -Nod shuffle,
microslits
52Sky subtraction with slit
B
A
Noise due to slit roughness
Corrected photon number
Signal to extract
distance along slit
estimated background signal uncertain slopes
due non-parallel sides
dispersion
Do this at every wavelength!
53Sky subtraction near bright sky lines
- Poor cancellation of sky line due to
- Difference in line profile due to
- uneven slit width
- IQ varies over field
- Difference in line location due to
- tilt of slit
- poor wavelength calibration/ solution/
54Nod shuffle (Va vient)
- Errors in sky subtraction
- Sky is spatially structured on scale of slit
width - Errors in slit fabrication lead to extra noise
- problems with flatfielding since calibration
spectrum needs to match sky's spectrum - fringing in CCDs
- Solution Use same detector pixels and optical
path to alternately sample object and sky
(beam-switch)? - Advantages
- improved background subtraction
- can use shorter slits (microslits) to increase
multiplex - Potential drawbacks
- must alternate fast enough to cancel out temporal
variations - detector readnoise is increased due to multiple
readouts
55Nod shuffle in action
CCD
- Requirements
- ability to move telescope with good repeatability
- ability to move charge on CCD (controller upgrade)
Courtesy Karl Glazebrook
Glazebrook Bland-Hawthorn PASP 113, 197 (2001)
56Nod shuffle on GMOS
- Example from engineering tests
- Shift object along normal slit
- 2 cycles of 60s in each position nod /- 1.5,
shuffle 70 px
Slit length
After subtracting bottom half from top half
Anti-object
Object
57Example object raw objectsky
I23.8
OH line forest
Courtesy Karl Glazebrook
58Example object NS subtracted
OII3727at 770nm
I23.8 z1.07
Courtesy Karl Glazebrook
59Microslits with NS
- Galaxy cluster AC114
- AAT/LDSS
- 586 microslitsnon-overlapping
- 40nm blockingfilter _at_ Ha
- I lt 22
Mask design software predicts layout of
spectra must have microslit landing on clean sky
after telescope nod
Couch et al. ApJ 549, 820 (2001)
60AC114 Mask
61Future challengesalternatives to slit masks?
62MOS in space
- Key goal of NGST explore the epoch of initial
galaxy formation - The faintest galaxies are small and far apart.
- At AB29 half light diameter 0.2
- At AB30 galaxy density is 3 x 106 deg-2
- ? 17000 in 7.5 x 3.75 arcmin
- The multiobject capability of
- NIRSPEC will access most
- interesting galaxies in a large
- field simultaneously.
- 6000 galaxies at R40, 30 lt KAB lt 32 or zgt1.6
- 1600 galaxies at R1500, 28 lt KAB lt 29 or zgt2
- 600 galaxies at R5000, KAB lt 23.1
- ? Requirements
- Focal plane must be remotely configurable
- with no consumables and be reliable
- Address high surface density of targets
HDS-S image from STIS (to AB30)
63MOS in cooled IR spectrographs
- Need to operate in temperatures depending on red
cutoff and spectral resolution 240K?80K? 30K - Slit masks must pre-cooled before installation in
instrument cryostat equipped with gate valves - Fibres can work in cold
- with attention to
- thermal mismatch but
- difficult with lenslets
- ? Requirements
- Focal plane must be
- remotely configurable
-
64Alternative multislit systems
- What's wrong with slit masks?
- Have to make one for every new field (or
airmass!) often requiring prior imaging campaign
? inefficient - For cooled IR instruments the mask must
thermalise ? cryostat must be opened and
resealed, time delay - not practical for space applications
- Reconfigurable focal planes
- can generate slits rapidly as a remote operation
- ? no operator intervention or consumables
- Current options have some drawbacks
- spatial quantisation limits flexibility in
adressing targets - spatial quantisation may introduce velocity
flux errors (requires modelling or use of image
data to correct) - microshutter/mirror arrays - limited contrast
ratios
65Microshutter arrays and sliding slits
slide
- Each half of slitlet slides individually to give
precise slit width and location in y - Inflexibility in matching object locations in x
- Only 20-40 slits possible
- Multiple banks impossible
- Contrast ratio high
- Individual tiny elements can be swiched on or off
- Quantisation in both x and y
- Array gives fine quantisation (1k x 1k via
mosaicing) - Multiple banks OK
- Filling factor limited (support grid)
- Contrast ratio limited
66Microshutter array
Baseline for NGST NIRSPEC 2kx1k (100x200mm) -
Moseley et al. NASA/GSFC
67Sliding multislits
NB also VLT/FORS-1 has a 19-slit unit
Backup for NGST/NIRSPEC (Courtesy CSEM/Astrium)
68Contrast ratio issues
- Problems if mask leaks light through
- bright sky leaks through enhancing background and
reducing sensitivity - bright objects leak through so their spectrum
contaminates strips of the detector - For NGST Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSPEC)
- "bright spoilers" increase in density with lower
galactic latitude so could wipe out Galactic
science - 2001 only barely adequate at Galactic poles
(rejects Zodi) - 20001 is okay for b gt 10? (probability of losing
10 of field depending on detector noise and
spectral resolution) - Micromirror arrays rejected because of poor
contrast - Microshutter arrays likely to achieve 20001 but
some science in Galactic will be impossible - Only metal slits can help!