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AIRS: The Antarctic Infrared Survey

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Title: AIRS: The Antarctic Infrared Survey


1
AIRS The Antarctic Infrared Survey
  • James M. Jackson
  • Institute for Astrophysical Research
  • Boston University

2
Collaborators
  • Boston University
  • Dan Clemens
  • Eric Tollestrup
  • Thomas Bania
  • Lowell Observatory
  • Robert Millis
  • Ted Dunham
  • Marc Bruie

3
Our Local UniverseKey Astrophysical Questions
  • Earliest stages of planet formation
  • Nature and number of brown dwarfs
  • Earliest stages of star formation

4
Key Science is Uniquely Addressed by Thermal
Infrared Observations
  • Wavelengths of 3 to 30 mm correspond to
    black-body temperatures of 100 to 1000 K
  • Infrared emission probes cooler objects
  • Protoplanetary disks
  • Brown dwarfs
  • Star forming regions

5
RCW 38
Another essential advantage Infrared penetrates
dust clouds
(M. Petr 2000)
VLT-FORS optical
VLT-ISAAC infrared (JHK)
Lada 2002
6
Why Antarctica for infrared studies?Its COLD!
  • Reduced infrared thermal background
  • Telescopes and atmosphere emit in the thermal
    infrared
  • Antarctic mean temperature 50 C
  • IR backgrounds typically 20 to 100 times smaller
    than at temperate sites
  • Excellent sensitivity

7
Greatly Reduced Infrared Sky Brightness
The sky background is 20 100 times smaller at
the South Pole compared with Mauna Kea
Phillips et al. 1999
8
Wide-field infrared surveys are essential to
study the local Universe 2MASS
2MASS 2mm
optical
www.ipac.caltech.edu/2mass
9
Wide-Field Infrared Imaging Surveying Large
Areas
  • Discover huge numbers of new objects for
    follow-up by larger telescopes or interferometers
  • Obtain statistically significant samples
  • BUT 2MASS still suffers from extinction
  • Longer wavelengths penetrate dust better
  • There are no large-scale
    3 mm lt l lt 5 mm surveys

10
The Antarctic Infrared Survey
  • The next generation Antarctic IR telescope
  • 2 meter aperture
  • 2-5 mm wide-field imaging camera
  • Essential step in eventual development of large
    (15 m) Antarctic IR telescopes and multi-element
    interferometers

11
The Antarctic Infrared Survey
  • Simultaneous K and L band survey
  • 8,000 square degrees (d lt -38o)
  • Same sensitivity at L-band as 2MASS at K-band (5s
    limiting magnitude of 15.0)
  • Detect all 2MASS objects with flat colors
  • Discover hundreds of thousands of redder objects

12
Formation of Planets Protoplanetary Disks
  • Dusty disks have temperatures perfectly matched
    to the thermal infrared.
  • Their presence can be inferred from excess IR
    emission.

13
Identifying protoplanetary disks with L band
excess
L-band SPIREX data
redder
redder
Disks manifest themselves as excess L-band
emission (Kenyon Gomez 2001)
14
L and T Dwarfs
  • Coolest stars and brown dwarfs are called L and
    T dwarfs
  • Boundary between stars and brown dwarfs is 0.07
    solar masses

15
IR color vs. stellar typereddest objects are
brown dwarfs
Cooler (lower mass)
Redder
Brown dwarfs
Burgasser 2002
16
AIRS can detect much more distant brown dwarfs
than 2MASS
N R3
17
How many L and T dwarfs will the Antarctic
Infrared Survey detect?
  • AIRS will reach Llim15.0, Klim 19.4 mag (tint
    9 minutes)
  • Survey 8,000 square degrees
  • L dwarfs
  • K-band detections 350,000
  • L-band detections 3,000 to 6,000
  • Increase known sample by factor of 30
  • T dwarfs
  • K and L band detections 16 to 32
  • Increase known sample by factor of 2

Kirkpatrick et al. 1999 Burgasser 2001
18
Massive Star FormationNGC 6334
SPIREX/Abu image Blue PAH feature (UV
irradiated dust) Red Brackett a (ionized
gas) Green L band continuum (warm dust) Burton
et al. 2000
20
Burton et al. 2000
19
Star-forming Regions 30 Doradus
SPIREX/Abu data Blue J, Green K, Red L Deeply
embedded stars show as red. L-band detects
deeply embedded YSOs undetected at K-band. This
is the worlds most sensitive ground-based
L-band image (19 mag) taken with only a 60 cm
telescope!
20
Temporal Variability
  • Brown dwarfs
  • Rotation rates, weather
  • Evolved red supergiants (Mira variables)
  • High mass, long period Miras are invisible at l lt
    3 mm
  • Gravitational microlensing by planets
  • IR removes degeneracy between impact parameter
    and planetary mass
  • Comets
  • Rotation rate known for 12 comets

21
AIRS Scientific Goal
  • To survey the sky in the thermal infrared in
    order to significantly increase the known samples
    of protoplanetary disks, brown dwarfs, and young
    stellar objects

22
AIRS Technical Requirements
  • Achieve comparable sensitivity to 2MASS (2 mm)
  • AIRS will detect every object with flat IR color
    that 2MASS did.
  • AIRS will detect a large number of new, redder
    objects that 2MASS did not.
  • L-band sensitivity of 14.3 magnitudes in 10
    minutes
  • Simultaneous 2 color imaging L and K
  • Large instantaneous field of view

23
Telescope Design
  • Cassegrain
  • 2 meter primary
  • f/1.6
  • 0.6 m secondary
  • 9.6 blockage
  • 42 arcmin field of view
  • Plate scale 58.18 mm/arcsec

24
AIRCAM Camera Design
AIRCAM CONCEPT
25
Camera
  • Simultaneous L and K band imaging
  • Registration
  • Cross-calibration with 2MASS
  • 2048 x 2048 InSb array for L and M bands
  • 1024 x 1024 HgCdTe array for K band

26
Expected Optical Performance Strehl Ratio vs.
Field of View
Diffraction-limited performance out to edges of
20x20 arcmin AIRCAM field of view
27
Expected Optical PerformanceEncircled Energy
vs. radial offset
Diffraction-limited subarcsec performance across
all bands for the entire 20x20 arcmin field of
view.
28
Sensitivity S/N of 5 in 9 minutes
29
Mapping Times K 19.4, L 15.0
30
A World-Class Observatory
  • Open to community
  • Open to guest instruments
  • Short proprietary period
  • Flexible, capable facility instruments
  • Broad user base

31
Prototype SPIREX/Abu
  • Every aspect of AIRS has been successfully
    demonstrated by SPIREX/Abu
  • Telescope
  • Camera
  • Community Access
  • Data pipeline
  • AIRS requires no new technology

32
The South Pole Site
  • Excellent, low sky backgrounds
  • Good, stable weather
  • Adequate, steady seeing
  • The South Pole site is extremely well
    characterized!
  • Excellent infrastructure and support
  • AIRS can achieve its technical requirements at
    Pole.

33
Site monitoring for an entire season
The advantage of relentless observing data
pipelining
34
Clear Skies
  • Measurements from SPIREX in 1999 show photometric
    conditions at L-band 52 of the time
  • Correlation with wind suggests 50 photometric
    over the last decade
  • Additional 20-30 of time is useful for
    photometry with less accuracy

35
Seeing at South Pole
  • Three separate techniques used to measure seeing
  • Differential image motion
  • Microthermal measurements
  • Echosonde measurements
  • Seeing at V band (visual) is 1.7 arcsec
  • Seeing at 3 to 5 mm will be 1.1 to 1.2 arcsec
  • This seeing is perfectly adequate for surveys
    (and is at or near the diffraction limit).

36
Unusual atmospheric conditions
Still air
Turbulent boundary layer
Katabatic wind
37
Dome C A better site?
  • Compared with the South Pole, Dome C is
  • Higher
  • Less windy
  • May well have better sensitivity and seeing
  • Not at 90o S
  • More sky coverage
  • Better access to communications satellites
  • BUT.
  • Site testing just beginning
  • Infrastructure not yet comparable

38
Dome C Weather Statistics
39
Another Advantage of Dome CLand Transport
  • Large pieces can be hauled in
  • Greatly reduces assembly time on ice

40
The Next Generation AIRS
  • Larger aperture (2-meter class)
  • Simultaneous 2-color imaging (HJK LM)
  • Continuous (24-hr), automated operation

gt Big improvement in efficiency over SPIREX/ABU
In the thermal infrared, AIRS can survey faster
than the Keck or Gemini telescopes!
41
Schedule
  • Years 1 and 2 (Boston U.)
  • Detailed design
  • IR surveys with MIMIR at Lowell 72-inch
  • Years 3 and 4 (Boston U. Lowell)
  • Procurement construction
  • Prepare test site at Anderson Mesa, Arizona
  • Year 5 (Lowell)
  • Systems integration
  • Automation and remote operations
  • Comprehensive tests

42
Plan
  • Complete conceptual design work 2003
  • Submit new proposal to US NSF Office of Polar
    Programs June 2004
  • Evaluate Dome C site-testing
  • Explore collaborations with French, Italians,
    Australians, and other partners

43
AIRS
  • An L-band survey is critical to bridge the gap
    between near- and mid-IR surveys.
  • Will revolutionize our understanding of
    protoplanetary disks, brown dwarfs, and star
    forming regions.
  • A 2-meter class telescope is the next step for
    Antarctic IR astronomy.
  • Essential step for larger telescopes and
    interferometers

44
Summary
  • Key science well-suited to Antarctica
  • SPIREX/Abu demonstration
  • Optical design well-developed
  • Solid plan with low risk
  • Will work well at South Pole
  • May work even better at Dome C
  • AIRS concept is sound and ready to go.
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