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Description of UKIRT
This note describes the properties of the telescope and its "Bottom
end"
systems (as they affect offsetting to faint sources), indicates likely
performance, and makes recommendations.
Offsetting over a couple of degrees or so
using the telescope
encoders is extremely common. Standard observing practice at
UKIRT is as set out below:
Procedure for Telescope Offsetting
- Using the HST Guide Star Catalog (current default) or another
source
(e.g. USNO a catalogues, digitised sky survey, etc.) select a
guide
star near the target object. (See Crosshead
constraints
under "Acquisition and guiding systems".)
- Point to a nearby star (i.e. one withn a degree or two of
the
target) with accurately known position. (Stars with positions accurate
to
<0."1 are currently taken from the Carlsberg Meridian Catalogue
(CMC),
which has around one star per square degree.)
- Begin fast guiding on the star.
- Set system offsets to zero. The instrument and autoguider now
share the same pointing properties.
- Slew to the target object position. It will be approximately
centred
(± a few x 0."1) in the instrument aperture.
- Drive the crosshead to the position of the preselected guide
star.
- Switch on the guider.
Limitations of telescope offsetting
The precision with which the telescope will point to the target object
(which, if the target is bright enough, can be measured by the change
in
pointing when the autoguider locks on after the slew) is determined by
three factors:
- The accuracy of the pointing model over the offset range
- The encoder performance in RA
- The encoder performance in DEC
The first of these should be a negligible error source over distances
as small as this: the pointing model is good to a couple of arcsec
(typically 1."5 rms over the sky soon after a pointing test) over
the accessible sky, so should be well below 0."1 over a degree or so.
The encoders have digitisation resolution of 0."07, but there is a
cyclic error of 0.3 arcsec RMS amplitude (it is NOT a sinusoid) and
period ~20"
on the sky. In RA, without guiding, this results in a ±~0."3 EW
wobble with a period of 1.3s. In a period of twenty seconds or so, as
the
fast guider sends averaged error corrections to the telescope the
encoder
position error will be averaged down to ~0."1 or less.
In DEC, however, we do NOT get averaging, so a position in
DEC is
uncertain by 0."3 RMS (equivalent to ~1" peak-to-peak).
The result is that telescope offsetting will locate the centroid of
an
image to perhaps ±0."1 in RA, but only to about ±0."3 in
DEC.
Telescope offsetting thus has definite limitations.
These add to the uncertainties of using the bottom-end systems
"backwards", as is commonly the case, by offsetting the telescope to a
source and then "tweaking" the crosshead to get locked on to it or a
guide
star.
After all these strictures, however,
it should be noted that many users
of the current spectrometer CGS4 apparently find Telescope Offsetting
quite adequate for the acquisition of most faint point sources.
Back to
pointing.
The focal plane scale of UKIRT at the instruments is
FPS=1.525±0.001
arcsec/mm. The scale at the crosshead location (below the pupil
imaging lens) is estimated at FPSC=1.5724±0.001 arcsec/mm.
The crosshead, manufactured by the SKF bearing company, can position
the
fast guider assembly with RMS accuracy ~10 um. It displays negligible
attitude-dependent flexure, across its whole range of travel. The
precision
in TRANSLATION is therefore as good as we could possibly need
(±0."015). Because it is a precison machine we do not expect the
slides to show any measureable (by us!) departure from orthogonality,
but
the accuracy of their N-S/E-W rotational orientation is not very well
known.
The above figures imply a fractional uncertainty in the FPSC of
±0.0007, which corresponds to an angular positioning error on
the sky
of ±0."14 if a source is placed on axis by guiding on a star 200
arcsec off axis, at about the limit of the crosshead travel. This is
close
to what we would expect to be satisfactory for use with the present
spectrometer CGS4, with its smallest slits (0."61 wide).
At present, therefore, only the uncertainty in the angular position
of
the crosshead is likely to be a source of problems. While we believe
that
these will not be very significant, it is probably best, if accuracies
of
<0."1 are desired, to use stars closer to the target than half the
maximum range of the crosshead (±3.5 arcmin, ~200").
NB: Although measurements suggest
that the fractional error in the
FSPC is ±7/10,000 and we believe that the NSEW
orientation
error is small, thus far we have not measured the latter at
all. It
is at present wise to assume that the overall error is at least twice
that
given, i.e. at least 0.15%.
Back to
Pointing.
CAVEAT: The perils of falling off the dichroic
It may quite easily be forgotten that the dichroic coating is carried
on a glass substrate 10mm thick, which being inclined at 45 degrees has
the effect of translating the transmitted beam sideways.
Thus the on-axis beam is moved 5."27±0."05 away from the
instrument in use, relative to the off-substrate beam, and right at the
edge of the substrate a double image can be formed. (The uncertainty
results from uncertainties in the refraction coefficient of the glass
and
the small position-dependence of the displacement, which varies across
the FOV.)
As seen from the N and S ports the dichroic spans the crosshead
field-of-view in an E-W direction, so there are no restrictions on
guide
star positions in that direction. However about 130"±10" N or S
(nominally 123" N and 140" S, from the IRCAM port, but not constant)
the
beam will fall off the dichroic and the shift will vanish. The absent
shift is a fruitful source of "missed" guide stars and must always be
borne in mind.
Recommendations
- Offsets from guide stars to invisible spectroscopy targets need
to
be determined in advance to a precision of ~0."1 so high-quality local
relative astrometry is required. Note that, e.g., VLA positions may not
always be on the same system as optical positions; it is always
preferable to measure positions from a plate or image showing both the
intended guide star and the target source.
- If your guide star is more than about 140 arcsec N or S (for N
and S
ports) of the target, remember to apply the "dichroic correction": the
image will be 5."27 closer to your instrument relative to an on-axis
image.
- Do not rely on guide stars between ~115" and ~145" N or S of the
source (with N and S ports) without checking them at the
telescope, in case they fall on the edge of the dichroic.
- The measured offsets should be applied to the
CROSSHEAD, i.e. the crosshead should be used to translate the
guider to the predetermined offset guide star position, so that when it
is
locked on to the guide star the source will be centered in the
spectrometer slit.
Procedure for cross-head offsetting
- Peak up carefully on a nearCMC star while guiding on it;
- Slew to your target object using telescope offsetting (q.v.);
- Apply to the crosshead the accurate offsets you measured from
your
(recent!) image, thereby moving the autoguider away from the the target
and onto the guide star, with the full precison of the crosshead and
your
astrometry. The autoguider will then be almost aligned on the guide
star
(certainly well enough to capture it).
- Start guiding on the selected guide star. The process of
capturing
the guide star will move the telscope a small amount which will
place the target accurately in the instrument aperture (slit,
row)
Unguided exposures
In RA the pseudo-sinusoidal encoder error causes an image on an
unguided exposure to be elongated E-W, though its centre will be
accurately
positioned in RA.
In DEC we thus have the opposite situation to that in RA: a short
unguided exposure will NOT be trailed in DEC, but its position will be
uncertain by ~0."3.
All this is true modulo the effects of wind: the telescope
drive
system bandpass is not broad enough to correct for windshake
vibrations.
The DVS should be closed if there is any suspicion of windshake.
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