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ROSA ROSA A high-cadence synchronized multi-camera solar imaging system Dr. Mihalis Mathioudakis Dr. Mihalis Mathioudakis Physics and Astronomy, Queen’s University Belfast ROSA : Rapid Oscillations in the Solar Atmosphere
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History (SECIS – RDI) Science examples Improving image quality Post-observing correction (Speckle, PDS) The proposed instrument – Tests Observing modes Associated instruments SummaryOutline
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SECIS (Solar Eclipse Coronal Imaging System) (RAL Ken Phillips, QUB) Fast mode impulsively generated wave in a loop (6 s) Williams, Phillips et al. MNRAS 2001 Williams, Mathioudakis et al. MNRAS 2002 RDI (Rapid Dual Imager) Oscillation induced along a flare ribbon (40 – 70 s) (BBSO - NSO, Sac Peak) McAteer et al. ApJ 2005 High frequency oscillations in the lower atmosphere (15 – 30s) Andic, Jess, Mathioudakis in preparation SECIS - RDI
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EIT/Loop image Williams, Mathioudakis et al. MNRAS 2002
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Intensity variations along the loop Williams, Mathioudakis et al. MNRAS 2002
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NOAA 9591 – C9.6 in Hα NOAA 9591 – C9.6 in Hα 200 arcsecs McAteer et al. ApJ 2005 RDI at Big Bear Solar Observatory
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C9.6 flare – Period of 52sec McAteer et al. ApJ 2005
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Ha blue wing 50 arcsec n Oscillatory power 15 – 30 sec (60 – 30mHz) n RDI at DST Sac Peak Andic, Jess, Mathioudakis in preparation RDI was funded by a Royal Society Instrument Grant
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Multi-wavelength Multi-wavelength McAteer et al. ApJ (2003)
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Krijger, Rutten et al A&A (2001) The need for synchronised imaging The need for synchronised imaging
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Krijger, Rutten et al. A&A 2002
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The need for high cadence The need for high cadence Allred et al. ApJ (2005)
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G-Band G-Band Image credit : SST - MPS
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Atmospheric turbulence Fried’s r 0 – diameter of refractive index fluctuations r 0 = 0.114 (( λ cosz) / 550)) 0.6 m r 0 = 11 cm ( λ = 550nm, z = 0) Spatial resolution of a ground based telescope limited to that of a telescope with diameter r 0 The largest telescopes have the same image quality as an 11cm telescope (if no image correction is applied) Choose an observing site with a large r 0 Time scale of atmospheric fluctuations : t = r 0 / v Wind speed v = 11 mph, t = 20 msec, (moves by its own diameter) Act quickly – Exposure times of a few msec at most! Image quality – The problem Image quality – The problem
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Speckle pattern Speckle pattern Remember : Seeing is equivalent to many small telescopes observing the same object but affected differently by atmospheric turbulence
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Speckle reconstruction Speckle reconstruction Image of a source in an ideal telescope in the absence of atmosphere is shaped by diffraction The Imaging Equation i (x) = o (x) ٭ p (x) (1) i - observed intensity/image of the source o - actual/true image of the source p - PSF describing instrument and seeing x - angular position Following the FT of (1) I (u) = O (u) P (u) P (u) – is the Optical Transfer Function (OTF) u – spatial frequency
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Speckle reconstruction Speckle reconstruction
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G-band Andic, Jess, Mathioudakis in preparation
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Improving image quality For Speckle to work you need Very short exposures. Freeze the seeing for each exposure (<20ms) Very high cadence. A sequence of images (50-100) over timescales that solar features remain unchanged (< 10 s). Bad seeing requires more images Great demand on camera read out speeds Signal to noise can be very low in narrow band images
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National Solar Observatory (NSO/NSF) Sacramento Peak n Altitude : 2800m n Very good seeing for short periods (morning) n Dunn Solar Telescope 0.76m 41m above ground + 67m underground n ASP/DLSP/SPINOR (vector magnetograms) IBIS, HSG, UBF, High Order AO n PPARC approved solar facility n 20 days per year for UK led proposals
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iXon+ 1004 X 1002 CCD Andor/Texas Instruments Max Frames per sec : 32 (full CCD) 200 (125 x 125) 1.8TB/day/CCD (8 hours observing) Fast local disks (15K RPM) LTO2/3 tape autoloaders Camera - Computing
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ROSA – Hardware tests
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Ha center before and after reconstruction
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Doppler velocities – Narrow band filters Doppler velocities – Narrow band filters Construction of blue ( λ – Δ λ) and red ( λ + Δ λ) wing images. The intensity difference between the images provides a Doppler shift. In a symmetric profile there is no difference in intensity.
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Image credit : IBIS group
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Fe I velocity map Image credit : IBIS group
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Magnetic Fields Zeeman effect – Polarization Magnetic Fields Zeeman effect – Polarization n Longitudinal case B to the line of sight n Transverse case B to the line of sight n Splitting proportional to the magnetic field n Components are polarized
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Magnetic Fields Δλ = 4.67 x 10 -13 g λ 2 B // where B // is the line of sight component of B UBF (Universal Birefringent Filter) and a Wollaston prism Images of opposite circular polarization
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Summary Summary ROSA has been funded £450K (SRIF3 and PPARC) Hardware tests completed (lab & telescope) Software tests (November 2006) Delivery in late 2008 at DST/NSO Common user instrument Time through TAC The DST is a PPARC approved facility Strong interest from the UK community 20 days per year for UK proposals (any instrument) The solar microscope Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST)
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Photospheric photon mean free path and pressure scale height 0.1’’ = 70 km Magnetoconvection coupled with atmospheric dynamics Small scale structures Umbra dots – Spicules – Bright points Flux Tubes – Buidling blocks of the magnetic photosphere Flux Tubes and Wave Generation Flux Tubes & Coronal Loops – How are they linked ? Physical processes take place in very small scales (10-20 km) Implications on stellar activity The need for high resolution
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Advanced Technology Solar Telescope ATST Advanced Technology Solar Telescope ATST Aperture : 4m FoV : 5’ 0.35 – 35 µm 0.03’’ @ 0.5 µm 0.08’’ @ 1.6 µm First light in 2012 Haleakala, Hawai Altitude : 3,080m Broad-band imager - Visible & NIR spectropolarimeters - Visible tunable filter - NIR tunable filter - IR spectrograph - Vis/NIR high dispersion spectrograph Design challenges : Energy removal, AO, scattered light, detectors
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