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Deutsche Version
COudé Near Infrared CAmera
CONICA (COudé Near Infrared CAmera) is
an instrument for diffraction limited imaging, coronography, spectroscopy,
and polarimetry at the VLT in the 1 to 5µm spectral range. It has been
built under ESO contract by a consortium of MPIA (PI Rainer Lenzen) and MPE
(CoI Reiner Hofmann). MPIA has been responsible for the optics and
cryo-mechanics, MPE contributed the detector and the readout electronics.
Preliminary acceptance by ESO has been finished in September 2001,
commissioning of CONICA together with NAOS started in November 2001, and the
instrument will be available to the astronomical community starting fall
2002.
In 1991, CONICA was designed as a speckle camera with the largest then
available arrays, a 256×256 HgCdTe NICMOS 3 array from Rockwell
for the wavelength range 1 - 2.5µm, and a 256×256 InSb
array from SBRC for 2.5 - 5µm. In summer 1995, when larger
arrays were announced, the consortium changed the design to replace the two
smaller arrays by a 1024×1024 InSb ALADDIN array from SBRC to cover
the 1 - 5µm range. This array has 32 video output channels
and can be read at a frame rate of 20 Hz which is sufficient for
speckle observations in the near infrared. End of 1996, ESO decided to
implement an adaptive optics system, called NAOS
(Nasmyth Adaptive Optics System), between the
telescope and CONICA. At the same time, CONICA was moved from the
Coudé focus to one of the Nasmyth foci. NAOS was originally equipped
with wavefront sensors for the visible spectral range only. During the
design phase, an infrared wavefront sensor was added, which made the speckle
mode of CONICA obsolete. NAOS has been built by a French consortium and has
been extensively tested together with CONICA in Paris. The combination of
NAOS and CONICA is the most complex first generation instrument to be
installed at the VLT.
The layout of CONICA is shown to the right (above; click on the image for a
full-scale view).
The figure to the right is a picture of the CONICA cryostat mounted to the
telescope adapter at MPIA, the rack on the right side houses the instrument
control electronics. CONICA is operated at about 80K, the detector array is
cooled down to 35K, all optical components (except for the dispersion
compensator) are located inside the cryostat. CONICA has a fixed collimator,
4 cameras for the short wavelength range (1 - 2.5µm) with
image scales of 13.6, 27.3, 54.6, and 109.2 mas/pixel, and 3 cameras
for the long wavelength range (2.5 - 5µm) with image scales
of 27.3, 54.6, and 109.2 mas/pixel. The field of view varies between
14 arcsec for the largest magnification and 73 arcsec diameter
(vignetted) for the smallest magnification. A total of 41 blocking
filters is mounted in 2 filter wheels: 7 wide band filters for the
atmospheric windows, 3 for ice features between 3 and 3.6µm
(R = 10), 10 for selected spectral lines
(R ~ 50 - 100), and 20 order selectors
(R ~ 30) for the cold K-band Fabry-Perot etalon
(R ~ 1800). Four grisms are available for low resolution
spectroscopy (R ~ 200 - 1000) in all bands, the entrance
slit widths are 42, 85, and 170 mas on the sky. Polarimetry can be done
using 4 wire grid polarizers with the relative direction of polarization of
0, 45, 90, and 135 degrees. Additionally, two Wollaston prisms rotated
45 degrees relative to each other are available (the two beams of different
polarization are separated by about 3 arcsec on the sky). In the
telescope focal plane, field masks, the slit masks for grisms, and a
coronographic mask are mounted in the mask wheel. In the pupil plane, a
series of Lyot stops is available to block radiation from the central hole
in the primary and from the spiders supporting the secondary. A tunable
dispersion compensator can be inserted into the beam to correct for
differential atmospheric dispersion at large zenith distances in J- and
H-Band, where the differential dispersion is of the order of the diffraction
limit for an 8m telescope.
The picture to the right shows CONICA (red) and NAOS (light blue) mounted
to the Nasmyth adapter (dark blue) of the VLT unit telescope number 4
during the commissioning phase I in November 2001.
The last figure (below) shows on the left hand side a short exposure image
of a star as it seen by standard instruments, the right hand side shows an
image of the same star with the effects of the atmospheric turbulence
corrected by the adaptive optics system. The center figure represents the
same data as three dimensional intensity plot. Note the concentration of
the light flux in a small area and the strongly enhanced peak intensity.
This enhancement of the peak flux results in a correspondingly increased
point source sensitivity.
Picture credits: 1, 2 : MPE; 3, 4 : ESO;
© Infrared and Submillimeter Astronomy Group at MPE
last update:
11/08/2004, editor of this page: Thomas Ott
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