宜居带行星发现者:霍比·埃伯利望远镜的工程和调试(会议报告)

S. Mahadevan, T. Anderson, E. Balderrama, C. Bender, Emily Bevins, Scott Blakeslee, A. Cole, D. Conran, S. Diddams, Adam Dykhouse, J. Darling, C. Fredrick, S. Halverson, F. Hearty, J. Jennings, K. Kaplan, S. Kanodia, Eric I. Levi, Emily Lubar, A. Metcalf, A. Monson, J. Ninan, Colin Nitroy, L. Ramsey, Paul Robertson, Arpita Roy, C. Schwab, M. Shetrone, R. Spencer, G. Stefansson, R. Terrien, J. Wright
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引用次数: 7

摘要

宜居带行星发现者(HPF)是一种稳定的、纤维馈送的近红外光谱仪,最近在10米霍比-埃伯利望远镜(HET)上投入使用。HPF的设计和建造是为了能够利用多普勒径向速度技术发现中晚期M矮星周围的低质量行星。仪器设计的新颖方面包括毫开尔文温度控制,仔细注意光纤扰和光学,安装和检测器读出方案,旨在最大限度地减少漂移和最大限度地提高径向速度精度。HPF的光学设计是一个不对称的白色瞳孔光谱仪布局在真空低温恒温器冷却到180 K。该光谱仪采用镀金镜面、马赛克阶梯形光栅和单台Teledyne夏威夷- 2rg (H2RG)近红外探测器,截止距离为1.7微米,覆盖了部分信息丰富的z、Y和J近红外波段,光谱分辨率为R~ 55000。使用1.7微米H2RG使HPF比大多数其他低温仪器工作温度更高-仪器工作温度为180K(允许相机使用普通眼镜),探测器工作温度为120K。总结了望远镜的工程和调试试验,以及目前HPF的径向速度性能。有了手头的数据,我们重新审视了一些进入仪器设计的设计交易,以探索在近红外精确RV测量中剩余的高杆。HPF试图将精确径向速度技术从光学扩展到近红外,在这次演讲中,我们试图与社区分享我们在这个相对较新的体制中的经验。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The habitable-zone planet finder: engineering and commissioning on the Hobby Eberly telescope (Conference Presentation)
The Habitable-Zone Planet Finder (HPF) is a stabilized, fiber-fed, NIR spectrometer recently commissioned at the 10m Hobby-Eberly telescope (HET). HPF has been designed and built from the ground up to be capable of discovering low mass planets around mid-late M dwarfs using the Doppler radial velocity technique. Novel apects of the instrument design include mili-kelvin temperature control, careful attending to fiber scrambling, and optics, mounting and detector readout schemes designed to minimize drifts and maximize the radial velocity precision. The optical design of the HPF is an asymmetric white pupil spectrograph layout in a vacuum cryostat cooled to 180 K. The spectrograph uses gold-coated mirrors, a mosaic echelle grating, and a single Teledyne Hawaii-2RG (H2RG) NIR detector with a 1.7-micron cutoff covering parts of the information-rich z, Y and J NIR bands at a spectral resolution of R~55,000. The use of 1.7 micron H2RG enables HPF to operate warmer than most other cryogenic instruments- with the instrument operating at 180K (allowing normal glasses to be used in the camera) and the detector at 120K. We summarize the engineering and commissioning tests on the telescope and the current radial velocity performance of HPF. With data in hand we revisit some of the design trades that went into the instrument design to explore the remaining tall poles in precision RV measurements in the near-infrared. HPF seeks to extend the precision radial velocity technique from the optical to the near-infrared, and in this presentation, we seek to share with the community our experience in this relatively new regime.
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