EFOSC2 Star-plate Set
Table of Content
The terms Star-plates, slits and masks are used interchangeably - they
all refer to elements which block light from some region of the field of
view of EFOSC2. All these are mounted on the Aperture
wheel of EFOSC2.
The aperture wheel is located on the focal plane of the telescope -
it is the only optical element in the instrument located before the collimator.
The scale at the aperture wheel is the same as the telescope scale (= 5.36
arcsec/mm).
The Slit wheel contains 10 positions of which
-
1 position should always be kept free
-
1 position is permanently occupied by the moveable 1.5" slit
-
1 position is needed for the pinhole mask for aligning other optical elements
(grisms)
-
1 position should be reserved for the 5" slit which is needed for spectrophotometric
calibration.
-
1 position is occupied by the Holes Mask used for focussing the instrument
during the set-up night.
Thus between 5 and 7 positions are available for user selected elements
at any given time. The full list of star-plates is given below.
Spectroscopic Long slits
The following spectroscopic long slits are available for use on the EFOSC2
instruments :
Slit name
|
Slit width
|
Slit#0.3
|
0.3"
|
Slit#0.5
|
0.5"
|
Slit#0.7
|
0.7"
|
Slit#1.0
|
1.0"
|
Slit#1.2
|
1.2"
|
Slit#1.5
|
1.5"
|
Slit#2.0
|
2.0"
|
Slit#5.0
|
5.0"
|
Slit#10
|
10.0"
|
Moveable#1.5
|
1.5"
|
Moveable#2.0
|
2.0"
|
The length of the slits is 4.1 arcmin.
The 1.5" moveable slit
The moveable 1.5" slit is permanently mounted
on the EFOSC2 instrument. It can be displaced by 10 mm on either side of
the centre position by means of a screw. A scale with 0.5 mm markings is
located under the slit for measuring the displacement. Moving the screw
clockwise shifts the spectral lines towards the blue, i.e. the spectral
coverage shifts towards the red. The change in spectral coverage is given
by
dL = 45.5 D * dY
where,
dL is the shift in wavelength in Angstroms,
D is the dispersion of the
grism in Angstrom/pix and
dY is the displacement of the slit in mm
However, one should always check the shift by taking a He-Ar spectrum
(request the support astronomer to obtain this directly from the OS panel)
and visually determining the wavelength range.
The y-pixel location of a slit varies from one installation to another
by a few pixels. Observers should obtain all the required calibrations
before a slit is dismounted from the wheel.
Offset slits
During the commissioning of the
VPH Grisms
it was realised that using slits with a fixed offset could be used to extend the
wavelength covered by the blue VPHG (Gr#19) to cover interesting features beyond the
normal range. There are now offset slits available (with the same selection of widths
as the standard slits) for this purpose with 15mm
offsets (corresponding to wavelength offsets of 218 Å for Gr#19) are now available,
so the wavelength range for Gr#19 is now 4180 Å to 5320 Å
(the full range is achievable by combining red offset and blue offset spectra).
These slits can of course be used with any other
grism;
the wavelength shift can be found using the above formula with dY = 15mm.
MOS Slit Masks
These are user defined and punched plates for multi-object spectroscopy.
EFOSC2 recognises 5 MOS names - Mos#1, Mos#2, Mos#3, Mos#4 and Mos#5
though jP2PP recognises 3 more MOS names. More information on MOS mask
creation can be found in the Multi-Object Spectroscopy
page.
Coronographic Mask
There is coronographic mask available. It is called by the name Cor_mask
in the jP2PP templates. The sizes for the large and small spots for the
mask are 8.0 and 4.0 arcsec respectively.
Coronographic Mask
Additionally, there is another mask, the Lyot stop which
has to be used in coronographic observations to eliminate scattered light
from bright stars. This however is mounted on the grism wheel even though
it is a mask (since it must be mounted in the pupil plane of the instrument).
The
Lyot stop has to be carefully aligned using a very bright star. This alignment
procedure requires an hour or two to execute.
Flexure problems
EFOSC2 was originally designed to be mounted in Cassegrain focus. The aperture
wheel (as all other wheels) were moving in a horizontal plane inclining only
with the telescope. Since EFOSC was moved to the Nasmyth focus at NTT, we
experience flexure problems due to the fact that the instrument is now
turned on the side and gravity can influence the position of the slits
depending on the rotator position of the instrument.
The effect of the flexure is a variation of the central Y-position
of the slits of about 1 pixel. This results in shifts of the wavelength
solution but also in the possibility that the object is not centered
perfectly in the slit anymore. Occasionally, also larger shifts
(up to 3 pixels) have been observed.
To account for the shift in wavelength, we
recommend to either use sky lines in the spectra to correct for these shifts
or take regular HeAr measurements during the night. To account for the
possibility that the object might not be centred, we have developed a new
aquisition template EFOSC_img_acq_NarrowSlit which takes first an image of the
slit and allows to measure its central Y-position
before doing the actual acquisition. We recommend to use this template for
spectroscopic observations using slits more narrow than 1.5".