outline i. the cologne mir heterodyne spectrometer this

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Heterodyne Heterodyne Interferometry Interferometry A New Start A New Start Long Baseline Interferometry in the Mid- Long Baseline Interferometry in the Mid- Infrared Infrared Schloß Ringberg, Sept. 1-5, 2003 Schloß Ringberg, Sept. 1-5, 2003 Andreas Eckart Andreas Eckart I.Physikalisches Institut der Universität zu Köln I.Physikalisches Institut der Universität zu Köln 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200 0,70 0,75 0,80 0,85 0,90 0,95 1,00 1,05 D ec 1st,2002 CO 2 E m issio n fro m Venus 9.2 m -laser-band R (36) @ 1087.94465 cm -1 D oppler-S hift1102 M Hz Integration tim e 6000 s T sys 5000 K R esolution 20 M Hz T * [K] i.f.[M Hz]

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Heterodyne Interferometry A New Start Long Baseline Interferometry in the Mid-Infrared Schloß Ringberg, Sept. 1-5, 2003 Andreas Eckart I.Physikalisches Institut der Universität zu Köln. Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

Heterodyne InterferometryHeterodyne InterferometryA New Start A New Start

Long Baseline Interferometry in the Mid-InfraredLong Baseline Interferometry in the Mid-InfraredSchloß Ringberg, Sept. 1-5, 2003Schloß Ringberg, Sept. 1-5, 2003

Andreas EckartAndreas Eckart I.Physikalisches Institut der Universität zu Köln I.Physikalisches Institut der Universität zu Köln

400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 1100 12000,70

0,75

0,80

0,85

0,90

0,95

1,00

1,05

Dec 1st, 2002

CO2 Emission from Venus 9.2 m-laser-band

R(36) @ 1087.94465 cm-1

Doppler-Shift 1102 MHzIntegration time 6000 sT

sys 5000 K

Resolution 20 MHz

T* [K

]

i.f. [MHz]

Page 2: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

Outline

I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

II. Future Developements in MIR Heterodyne Detection

III. Future Perspectives for Heterodyne VLTI

Page 3: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

I. THIS

Cologne Tuneable Heterodyne Infrared Spectrometer

Daniel Wirtz / Guido Sonnabend /Volker Vetterle / Rudolf Schieder

I. Physikalisches InstitutUniversität zu Köln

The group of Kostiuk et al. GSFC/NASA is running a CO2 heterodyne spectrometer system

Page 4: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

HeNe

PC AOS IF

DiplexerScanner-mirror

HeNe-Detector

HgCdTe-Detector+HEMT Signal Reference Hot

Telescope

Cold

Loads

QCL

Experimental Setup

Page 5: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

The Diplexer

Ring FP Diplexertuned to LO frequency60% transmissionsignal in reflection100% reflectionprinciple of notch filteraccepts a broad range ofbeam modes!

LO locked throughdiplexer-detector line:stabile performancelong integrationup to 8 hours.

Page 6: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

HgCdTe Detector / MCT

Array capability of system!

Page 7: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

QCL: Quantum Cascade Laser

MIR-Heterodyne-Receiver

•Semicinductor (AlGaAs,GaAs) device based on tunneling and quantum confinement, tunable via temperature and diode current•cascade of up to 40 light emitting cells•FIR-NIR 20 - 100 mW power (Bell Labs, Alpes Laser CH etc.)

Page 8: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

Quantum Cascade Laser

Page 9: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 16004000

5000

6000

7000

8000

9000

10000

11000

12000

13000

MCT300 mV2 mA

detector: bias:photo-current:

CO2- vs. QC-laser

QC-laser CO

2-laser

Sys

tem

Tem

pe

ratu

re [

K]

i.f. [MHz]

Performance: QCL versus CO2-Laser

Comparable noise temperatures are reached with both LOs

Tsys=NEP/k

3 x quantumlimit ( 1440 K)

Page 10: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

1145 1150 1155 1160 1165 1170 1175

10

20

30

40

50

Fit: Gauss

Gauss = 1,3 MHz

co

un

ts

i.f. [MHz]

TDL-QCL Beat-Experiment

Narrow linewidths; useful for heterodyne operation

MIDI ~10e-2THIS 4e-8

Page 11: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

Transportable Spektrometer Setup

MIR-Heterodyne-Receiver

•Dimensions 60x60x45 cm•Weight 80 kg

stabilizedHeNe-Laser blackbody

to the telescope

diplexer

HeNe-Laser detectorLN2-dewar

with QCLand MCTdetector

Page 12: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

THIS: Present Technical Specifictions

MIR-Heterodyne-Receiver

•wavelength range: 3-30 microns (requires change of LO, diplexer or detector) •spectroscopic resolution: up to 1 MHz

•bandwidth 1.4 GHz

Page 13: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

• atmospheric measurements

• molecules in sunspots

• CO2-laser emission from Venus

Science Applications:

Page 14: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

400 600 800 1000 1200 14000,035

0,040

0,045

0,050

0,055

0,060

integration time:1600s

systemtemperature: 7000K

resolution: 1 MHz

6 K

8 K

stratospheric

ozone-absorption seen against

the moon at 1088,8cm-1

T* [

K]

re

l. In

t.

intermediate frequency [MHz]

Ozone against the Moon

Page 15: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 16000,77

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0,84

Combined Gauss fit Gauss fit Peak 1 Gauss fit Peak 2 Data binned to 5 MHz resolution

2

1

28SiO [5-4 P56] @ 1088.64 cm-1

second feature not assigned

Peak Molecule Center Width------------------------------------------------1 SiO 819,16 332,572 n.a. 1190,7 240,48------------------------------------------------

rel.

Inte

nsi

ty

i.f.[MHz]

SiO in a Sunspot

Page 16: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 1100 12000,70

0,75

0,80

0,85

0,90

0,95

1,00

1,05

Dec 1st, 2002

CO2 Emission from Venus 9.2 m-laser-band

R(36) @ 1087.94465 cm-1

Doppler-Shift 1102 MHzIntegration time 6000 sT

sys 5000 K

Resolution 20 MHz

T* [

K]

i.f. [MHz]

None-LTE CO2 Emission from Venus

Page 17: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

• Ozone and CO2 observations on Mars/Venus

• Titan‘s atmosphere resolvable with large telescopes

• Other molecules in planetary atmospheres / bright IR-sources (IRC+10216, CRL 618)

• Bandwidth enhancement- next generation AOS (3-4 GHz)- QWIP (and HEB) detectors ?

• 17µm development H2 S0(1) line

• Second generation instrument for SOFIA (2007)

II. The Future

Page 18: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

Large Bandwidths

with QWIPs

Liu et al. 1995Appl.Phys.Lett. 67, 1594

QWIP: Quantum Well Photodiode

Page 19: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

600 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200 1300 14000

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

35000

40000

45000

50000

QWIP (100 periods) with an area of 120µm2 U

Bias=8V

PCO

2-Laser

=6mW

IPhoto

=1,2 mA

Sys

tem

Te

mp

era

ture

[K

]

i.f. [MHz]

QWIP plus CO2-LASER

QWIP: Quantum Well Photodiode

Page 20: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

III. Prospects for Heterodyne VLTI

Page 21: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

1) Receivers at the telescopes

2) Receivers in the VLTI Lab

3) Phase referencing operation

Possible Heterodyne Observing Modes using the the VLTI

Page 22: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

1) VLTI Heterodyne Operation at the UTs or ATs

Use one receiver per telescope at each of thetelescope foci.

Full delay compensation could be performed in the radio domain.

In a test phase two of the ATs could be equippedwith MIR heterodyne receivers for single dishmeasurements and for interferometric measurements.

Problem: LO reference has to be provided across the array to phase lock the receivers (LASER-line)

Page 23: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

2) Heterodyne Operation in the VLTI Laboratory

Use one receiver per telescope at each of theinput ports in the beam combination laboratory.

The system makes use of the VLT delay lines and can correct for differential delays at radiofrequencies in the ‘usual way‘.

Advantages: 1) LO can be distributed locally (low power LO distribution?!)[2) Could use available delay compensation system]

Page 24: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

VLTI Auxiliary Telescopes

The first 2 of 4 Atswill be ready for the VLTI in the first half of 2004.

AMOS, Liege

Page 25: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

VLTI Delay Line

Page 26: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

The telescopes are relocatable on 30 stationsof the arry providing baselines between8m and 200m

VLTI with Unite and Auxiliary Telescopes

Page 27: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

Possible Locations of a VLTI Heterodyne Backend

Page 28: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

3) Phase Referencing

The broad continuum capabilities of the VLTIcould be used to phase the interferometer and at the same time to integrate on a faint sources in the vicinity of a bright continuum source.

Advantages: 1) LO can be distributed locally (low power LO distribution?!) 2) System makes use of available delay compensation system 3) highest sensitivity plus large sky coverage

Page 29: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

Finito: On axis NIR fringe tracker ESO/OA di Torino First Lab-fringes in Garching 2003 First Paranal fringes planned end of 2003

PRIMA: separation to reference star - 1 arcmin field of view - 2 arcsec reference star brightness 12-13 UTs/ 9-10 ATs

Phase Referencing

Page 30: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

Sky Coverage

Page 31: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

Summary

I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

Tunable system operational

II. Future Developements in MIR Heterodyne Detection

Sensitive broad band operation over several GHz bandwidth

III. Future Perspectives for Heterodyne VLTI

Promissing operation modes could be installed

Page 32: Outline I. The Cologne MIR Heterodyne Spectrometer THIS

END