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LISA, The Near Infrared Camera for VINCI
LISA is the near infrared camera for VINCI, the test instrument for the VLT
interferometer. VINCI is built in a collaboration of ESO,
DESPA, and MPE. The system
will be integrated
and tested at ESO in Garching in September 2000, operation at Paranal should
start in Spring 2001.
The goals of VINCI are to commission the VLTI subsystems, to measure fringe
visibilities (primarily in K-band), and to provide an artificial star for
alignment. DESPA provides the main components of VINCI, using technologies
already tested in other interferometers. The essential parts of VINCI are: the
beam combiner (based on single-mode fluoride glass fibers), the reference
sources (for internal tests, future science instruments, and alignment), the
image and pupil sensor, and the fringe sensor (the near infrared camera LISA).
The LISA optics and cryo-mechanics are being built at MPE. The detector, a
1024×1024
HgCdTe HAWAII array from Rockwell is supplied by ESO together with the readout
electronics. The cryostat
houses a filter wheel with 6 positions (open, closed, K-band filter,
TBD narrow band filters), the camera lens doublet, and the detector array. The
collimator is located outside the cryostat, the beam is deflected into LISA by
a plane mirror which can be replaced by a grating for the observation of
dispersed fringes. LISA detects the light from 4 single-mode-fibers (6.4µm
core diameter) located at the corners of a square of 125µm length in the
focal
plane of the warm collimator. On the detector array the fiber images are
separated by 9 pixels, the image of each fiber is smaller than one pixel.
Therefore, a minimum of 4 pixels have to be read. Because of adjustment
problems and aberrations, the fiber images may be larger than one detector
pixel (17µm square), or they are not centered on the pixel, in this case
rectangular areas adapted to the beam size can be read.
Two of the four fibers are outputs of the beam combiner, they carry the
complementary interferograms (phase shifted by 180 degrees). The other two
fibers carry a small percentage of the flux from the interferometer channels
just before beam combination, i.e. their brightness is proportional to the
flux coupled into the interferometer arm by the corresponding telescope. The
coupling efficiency varies with the image quality (e.g. seeing, adaptive optics
correction), thus modulating the amplitude of the interferograms. By dividing
the difference of the interferograms by the product of the other two signals,
this effect can be removed.
To detect fringes even when the optical path difference changes quickly (which
will happen when the interferometer is used for the first time), the pixel
containing the fiber images have to be read at a high speed. By locating the
fiber images close to the corner of one quadrant, a frame rate of several kHz
is feasible.
© Infrared and Submillimeter Astronomy Group at MPE
last update:
11/08/2004, editor of this page: Thomas Ott
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