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The Brazilian Tunable Filter Imager for the SOAR telescope

Authors :
de Oliveira, Cláudia Mendes
Taylor, Keith
Quint, Bruno
Andrade, Denis
Ferrari, Fabricio
Laporte, Rene
Ramos, Giseli de A.
Guzman, Christian Dani
Cavalcanti, Luiz
de Calasans, Alvaro
Fernandez, Javier Ramirez
Castañeda, Edna Carolina Gutierrez
Jones, Damien
Fontes, Fernando Luis
Molina, Ana Maria
Fialho, Fábio
Plana, Henri
Jablonski, Francisco J.
Reitano, Luiz
Daigle, Olivier
Scarano Jr., Sergio
Amram, Philippe
Balard, Philippe
Gach, Jean-Luc
Carignan, Claude
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

This paper presents a new Tunable Filter Instrument for the SOAR telescope. The Brazilian Tunable Filter Imager (BTFI) is a versatile, new technology, tunable optical imager to be used in seeing-limited mode and at higher spatial fidelity using the SAM Ground-Layer Adaptive Optics facility at the SOAR telescope. The instrument opens important new science capabilities for the SOAR community, from studies of the centers of nearby galaxies and the insterstellar medium to statistical cosmological investigations. The BTFI takes advantage of three new technologies. The imaging Bragg Tunable Filter concept utilizes Volume Phase Holographic Gratings in a double-pass configuration, as a tunable filter, while a new Fabry-Perot (FP) concept involves technologies which allow a single FP etalon to act over a large range of interference orders and spectral resolutions. Both technologies will be in the same instrument. Spectral resolutions spanning the range between 25 and 30,000 can be achieved through the use of iBTF at low resolution and scanning FPs beyond R ~2,000. The third new technologies in BTFI is the use of EMCCDs for rapid and cyclically wavelength scanning thus mitigating the damaging effect of atmospheric variability through data acquisition. An additional important feature of the instrument is that it has two optical channels which allow for the simultaneous recording of the narrow-band, filtered image with the remaining (complementary) broad-band light. This avoids the uncertainties inherent in tunable filter imaging using a single detector. The system was designed to supply tunable filter imaging with a field-of-view of 3 arcmin on a side, sampled at 0.12" for direct Nasmyth seeing-limited area spectroscopy and for SAM's visitor instrument port for GLAO-fed area spectroscopy. The instrument has seen first light, as a SOAR visitor instrument. It is now in comissioning phase.<br />Comment: accepted in PASP

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1304.3263
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1086/670382