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A complex multi-notch astronomical filter to suppress the bright infrared sky

Authors :
Bland-Hawthorn, J.
Ellis, S. C.
Leon-Saval, S. G.
Haynes, R.
Roth, M. M.
Löhmannsröben, H. -G.
Horton, A. J.
Cuby, J. -G.
Birks, T. A.
Lawrence, J. S.
Gillingham, P.
Ryder, S. D.
Trinh, C.
Source :
Nature Communications, 2, 581 2011
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

A long-standing and profound problem in astronomy is the difficulty in obtaining deep near-infrared observations due to the extreme brightness and variability of the night sky at these wavelengths. A solution to this problem is crucial if we are to obtain the deepest possible observations of the early Universe since redshifted starlight from distant galaxies appears at these wavelengths. The atmospheric emission between 1000 nm and 1800 nm arises almost entirely from a forest of extremely bright, very narrow hydroxyl emission lines that varies on timescales of minutes. The astronomical community has long envisaged the prospect of selectively removing these lines, while retaining high throughput between the lines. Here we demonstrate such a filter for the first time, presenting results from the first on-sky tests. Its use on current 8m telescopes and future 30m telescopes will open up many new research avenues in the years to come.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. Nature Communications. Published 06 December 2011

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature Communications, 2, 581 2011
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1112.1694
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1584