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Multi-slit spectroscopy In sky-noise dominated conditions (most interesting!) the use of slits
is essential: eg: Faint object, extra-galactic, surveys:
Same instrument can do both imaging and spectroscopy – hence multi-slit spectroscopy is “easy” (in principle).
Once you have a target list you have to design the mask (ie: select the subset of objects you are going to observe spectroscopically) so that the spectra
don’t overlap Have sufficient sky either side of the object in each slit
Multi-slits in the 4m era (1980s) Cryocam (KPNO); LDSS, LDSS++ (AAT) ; EFOSC (NTT/ESO) and more recently LDSS-2 (WHT & Magellan)
Multi-slits in the 8-10m era (1990s) LRIS (Keck) ; FORS (VLT) ; GMOS (Gemini) and more recently: DEIMOS (Keck) ; VMOS (VLT)
IMACS mask (c2003)
Telescope
Focal Plane
Slit
Spectrograph
Spectrographcollimator
Dispersing element
camera
detector
Figure 3.1
Multislit spectroscopy
• Example of multislit spectrometer
• Easier to achieve at telescope (can use holes in a mask) but preparation and reduction more complex
• Need to ensure spectra don’t overlap
LDSS-2mask
superimposed on sky image
Great care has to be taken in selecting objects to study so that they don’t overlap in wavelength direction.
Also need objects of similar brightness so the SNRs are similar.
Mask optimization is NOT trivial!
Field acquisition is NOT trivial
Laser Cutting Machineat Gemini
IMACS curved slit masks
IMACS spectrograph(Magellan Telescope)
Multi-Object Spectroscopy (what could be simpler
than ….)
Slitless spectroscopy: Point-like sources (eg: stars, distant galaxies etc.) can
be observed spectroscopically without the use of a slit to define their input aperture.
In this case d is defined by the dispersive power combined with the instrinsic (angular) size of the object (usually defined by the seeing).
Thus an imaging system incorperating a dispersive element can, in principle, give the spectra of all objects within the field. This can be enormously powerful.
Slitless Spectroscopy
Classic Example: Objective Prism on the UK Schmidt Telescope (full
aperture). Spectra of all objects (105 – 106) above sky background can be obtained over the full 6º field of view. But … While light from point source is dispersed (and hence has lower
flux density), light from background remains the same. Contrast between object and sky is reduced. This is why you need slits!
Spectra overlap in -direction (try rotating the prism by 90º) Both argue for ultra-low dispersion and resolution
Palomar Schmidt system gives <1,000Å/mm (R ~200 at best) – crude IDs and red-shifts of bright galaxies
Picture of Palomar Schmidt prism with
sample spectraCorrector +
Objective Prisms (full aperture)
Primary Mirror
Special case of slit-less spectroscopy (emission-line
point sources) Emission-line point sources don’t
overlap (in general). Examples: L galaxies at high redshift Distant HII galaxies, HII regions, H-H
Objects … Classic case:
Planetary Nebulae
PNe are point sources?
So what about PNe inExternal Galaxies?
Certainly emission line sources Also distant enough to be point
sources
E-galaxy with kinematic mass tracers
Globular Clusters?Planetary Nebulae?
Detection of PNe in E-Galaxies and their use as kinematic
probes PNe are very effective “standard candles”
Flux can be used to measure distances to E-Galaxies
Radial motion of PNe can be used to map the dynamical motions within an E-Galaxies V. difficult otherwise since need high SNR
continuum spectra of faint outer envelope With PNe can trace mass and “shape” of E-
Galaxies How?
PNe are point-like PNe spectra are dominated by pure narrow
emission-lines which are easily contrasted against the sky background
PNS optical configuration
PNS on the WHT (c2000)
The PN spectrograph(How does it really work?)
Taylor and Douglas (1995)
Use slitless spectroscopy to detect emission-line sources above the sky background: Same detection threshold as
for direct imaging Now the position of the PNe
in the slitless spectrograph image is a function of:
its “native” position in the sky, modified by …
its velocity – its position is deflected in the dispersion dirn
But, we don’t know its “native” position, so we don’t know its velocity – right?
How do we disentangle the two parameters?
Easy … take 2 slitless spectral images with the dispersion dirn reversed
Now a PNe detection requires searching for image pairs:• Pair separation = Velocity• Pair centre = Position• Pair flux gives distance
PN Spectrograph Images
y
x
x
y
y-slice through PN
y-slice through subtracted pair of images
Narrow-bandImage [OIII]
Differencing image pair gives characteristic PNe signature. Can use optimized pattern recognition software to pull out PNe signatures to determine
• (x0,y0)n ; PNe flux ; PNe systemic velocity
It works!
PNe
PNe