STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Precision calibration empowers largest solar telescope
by Staff Writers
Cardiff, UK (SPX) Jun 04, 2019

Group model retardance (left) and diattenuation (right) tolerance analysis.

An article published in the SPIE publication Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems (JATIS), "Polarization Modeling and Predictions for DKIST Part 5: Impacts of enhanced mirror and dichroic coatings on system polarization calibration," marks a substantial advance in ensuring the accurate solar information measured and collected by the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST).

As with any astronomical instrument, calibration is required in order to remove effects that the instrument itself might have on the data. By concentrating on characterizing the telescope's thin film metal coatings, anti-reflection coatings, and dichroic mirrors, the authors have developed unique computer models based on laboratory data for the polarization transmissivity of the entire telescope system.

Not only was the team able to predict the performance of a variety of devices in the optical system, they were also able to specify, design, and build compensating devices to correct for unwanted polarization.

In addition, the team has the ability to fit multi-layer coating designs; this allows them to predict system-level polarization properties of mirrors, anti-reflection coatings, and dichroics at arbitrary incidence angles, high spectral resolving power, and on curved surfaces through optical modeling software packages.

Altogether, the researchers have demonstrated confidence in the precision calibration of the telescope.

According to JATIS Associate Editor and SPIE Fellow James Breckinridge, the findings will help ensure that the DKIST will be one of science's most powerful observational instruments: "In order to make sure you're measuring what's going on in the sun and not in the instruments, you have to calibrate the instrumentation, which is precisely what this research has successfully demonstrated.

"I believe that this telescope system has the most accurate and comprehensive polarization calibration of any astronomical telescope in the world. This will allow astronomers to measure solar features and activity to unprecedented accuracy, and should lead to many significant discoveries."

Research paper


Related Links
International Society for Optics and Photonics
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
NICER's night moves trace the x-ray sky
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 31, 2019
In this image, numerous sweeping arcs seem to congregate at various bright regions. You may wonder: What is being shown? Air traffic routes? Information moving around the global internet? Magnetic fields looping across active areas on the Sun? In fact, this is a map of the entire sky in X-rays recorded by NASA's Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER), a payload on the International Space Station. NICER's primary science goals require that it target and track cosmic sources as the stati ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Pentagon calls Turkey plan to buy Russian missiles 'devastating'

Syrian air defence fires at 'enemy missiles' in Damascus: state media

Erdogan offers Trump working group on Russian missiles

Washington says 'possible' Ankara will reject Russian missiles

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Britain's Royal Air Force tests miniature missile decoys on Typhoon jets

Raytheon nabs $38.2M contract for Army TOW missiles

US approves missile sales to S.Korea, Japan

Israeli missile hits Quneitra, Syria reports casualties

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
General Atomics awarded $36.4M for drone, intelligence work in Afghanistan

Northrop Grumman nabs $65M for drones for Navy, Australia

'Neural Lander' uses AI to land drones smoothly

Vestas launches massive drone-based blade inspection campaign

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Future narrowband satellite capability to transfer to Air Force

AFRL demonstrates world's first daytime free-space quantum communication enabled by adaptive optics

Navy to transfer future satcom programs to Air Force

Harris to build new satellite connection system prototype for USAF

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Oshkosh, Broshuis land $13.3M Army contract for new semitrailers

Making DoD's Vast Logistics Enterprise More Resilient

Navy awards $22.7M to BAE for three 57mm MK 110 gun mounts

Raytheon awarded $101.3M to build anti-tank missiles for U.S. Army

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Citing Iran, Trump bypasses Congress to sell arms to Saudis, UAE

New criticism over French arms shipments to Saudi Arabia

Break-in at sensitive Indian military office near Paris: prosecutor

Erdogan expects F-35 jets 'sooner or later' despite Russian missiles purchase

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Pentagon confirms push to hide USS John McCain from Trump

Ukraine's Zelensky to visit Brussels next week

Xi broke promise on South China Sea: Top US general

US-China anchors' face-off lets down fans

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Monitoring the lifecycle of tiny catalyst nanoparticles

Fast and selective optical heating for functional nanomagnetic metamaterials

2D gold quantum dots are atomically tunable with nanotubes

Harnessing microorganisms for smart microsystems