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WIYN Observatory

The WIYN Observatory is owned and operated by the WIYN Consortium. Its 3.5-meter telescope is the second largest optical telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona. Most of the capital costs for the observatory were provided by the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Indiana University, and Yale University, while the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO) provides most of the operating services. The NOAO is an institution of the United States; it is the national optical observatory program and supports a collection of ground-based telescopes at Kitt Peak (where WIYN is located) as well as other locations.

WIYN Telescope
Part ofKitt Peak National Observatory 
Location(s)Arizona
Coordinates31°57′27″N 111°36′04″W / 31.9575°N 111.601°W / 31.9575; -111.601
OrganizationWIYN Consortium 
Built–1994 (–1994)
Telescope styleoptical telescope 
Diameter3,498.85 mm (11 ft 5.750 in)
Collecting area9.6 m2 (103 sq ft)
Focal length6.125 m (20 ft 1.1 in)
Mountingaltazimuth mount 
Enclosurerhombicuboctahedron 
Websitewww.wiyn.org
Location of WIYN Observatory
  Related media on Commons

Telescope edit

WIYN is a Ritchey–Chrétien telescope with an altitude-azimuth mount. The lightweight borosilicate primary mirror has a diameter of 3.49885 m (137.75") and was manufactured at the Richard F. Caris Mirror Lab.[1][2] Sixty-six active optics actuators support the primary mirror.

The telescope is located in a half-Rhombicuboctahedron dome.

Current instrumentation edit

Hydra edit

Hydra is a multiobject spectrograph using fiber optics robotically positioned in the focal plane to allow up to 100 separate objects to be observed at a time. The light is guided to a spectrograph room under the main telescope where a CCD camera records the spectrum of each object. The field of view is approximately 1 degree. [1] Hydra has been operating since 1990.[3] It was originally located at the Nicholas U. Mayall Telescope before being moved to WIYN in 1994.[4] In 2021, Hydra received a major upgrade to the "gripper" fiber positioning robot.

NEID edit

Funded by the NN-EXPLORE collaboration between NASA and the National Science Foundation, the NEID spectrograph searches for extra-solar planets by looking for minute variations in the radial velocity of the host star caused by the orbiting planet(s).[5] The extremely precise radial velocities (50 cm/s) provided by NEID will provide masses and densities for exoplanets discovered by the TESS space telescope.[6] The name NEID comes from the Tohono Oʼodham word for "to see."[7]

The spectrograph was designed and built at Pennsylvania State University, with the construction beginning in 2016.[8] The Port Adapter portion of the instrument, which provides guiding, focus correction, fast tip-tilt correction, and atmospheric dispersion correction to the starlight before injecting it into the optical fiber feeding the spectrograph, was built by the University of Wisconsin in collaboration with NOAO.[9] On June 2, 2021, NEID completed commissioning.

The NEID is also assisted by The Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) with super-computer time and expertise in the scientific search for new exoplanets.[10]

One Degree Imager (ODI) edit

 
ODI Sensor

The One Degree Imager (ODI) is the flagship of WIYN's new instrument initiatives. ODI utilizes both WIYN's one degree field of view and excellent image quality. The original design for ODI was to cover the one square degree field using a total of 64 Orthogonal Transfer Arrays (OTAs) with a total of 1 GigaPixel and a pixelscale of 0.11 arcseconds per pixel. Orthogonal transfer arrays allow to actively improve image sharpness by correcting images for tip/tilt motion during the integration.[11] Corrections will be done over the entire field of view, making ODI a unique and competitive instrument in the era of wide-field surveys. ODI is funded by the WIYN partners and the National Science Foundation.

ODI was first commissioned in a partial or prototype configuration (pODI) using 13 OTAs in the summer of 2012, and was available for science observations since early 2013. pODI was decommissioned in late 2014 to undergo a significant upgrade. The upgraded ODI, now using 30 OTAs in a 5x6 layout was recommissioned in summer 2015 and has been available for science observations since October 2015.[12]

WIYN High Resolution InfraRed Camera (WHIRC) edit

WHIRC is a near infrared high resolution imaging camera commissioned in 2008. WHIRC was a joint project between the WIYN partners and STScI. It consists of a 2k × 2k detector providing an excellent pixel scale of 0.1"/pixel and a field of view of 200 × 200 arcsec. WHIRC can be used with the WIYN Tip/Tilt Module (WTTM) to provide exquisite high-resolution images. A large set of filters is available.

Past (no longer available) instruments edit

Mini-Mosaic edit

MiniMo is a CCD consisting of two 2048 × 4096 pixel chips, with a field of view of 9.6 arcminutes. The two separate chips allow for faster readout of the image than would have been otherwise possible, as they can be read out simultaneously. [2]

Governance edit

The WIYN Consortium is governed by a board of directors, which includes three members of each partner institution. The board meets twice a year. The Science Steering Committee provides scientific guidance to the board and the WIYN director.

From 2000 to 2008, the WIYN director was George Jacoby, followed by Pierre Martin (2008–2010). From 2010 to 2013, Pat Knezek served as interim director. Since 2013, Eric Hooper (UW-Madison) has served as interim director.

Yale University withdrew from the WIYN consortium on April 1, 2014 and was replaced by the University of Missouri in the fall of that year. In 2015, a NASA-NSF partnership called NN-EXPLORE effectively took over NOAO's share, although NOAO still manages the operations.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Johns, Matthew W.; Blanco, Daniel R. (1994-06-01). Stepp, Larry M. (ed.). "WIYN 3.5-meter telescope project". Advanced Technology Optical Telescopes V. International Society for Optics and Photonics. 2199: 2–9. Bibcode:1994SPIE.2199....2J. doi:10.1117/12.176153. S2CID 109482491.
  2. ^ "WIYN 3.5m Observatory". www.wiyn.org. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  3. ^ Barden, Samuel Charles; Rudeen, Andy C. (1990-07-01). Crawford, David L. (ed.). "Kitt Peak National Observatory fiber actuator device". Instrumentation in Astronomy VII. International Society for Optics and Photonics. 1235: 729–735. Bibcode:1990SPIE.1235..729B. doi:10.1117/12.19136. S2CID 123032688.
  4. ^ Barden, Samuel Charles; Armandroff, Taft; Muller, Gary P.; Rudeen, Andy C.; Lewis, Jeff L.; Groves, Lee (1994-06-01). Crawford, David L.; Craine, Eric R. (eds.). "Modifying Hydra for the WIYN telescope: an optimum telescope, fiber MOS combination". Instrumentation in Astronomy VIII. International Society for Optics and Photonics. 2198: 87–97. Bibcode:1994SPIE.2198...87B. doi:10.1117/12.176816. S2CID 121200545.
  5. ^ "A WIYN-win partnership". The Planetary Society. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  6. ^ "What is NEID? | The NEID Spectrograph". neid.psu.edu. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  7. ^ "New Instrument for WIYN: NEID | ast.noao.edu". ast.noao.edu. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  8. ^ Schwab, C.; Rakich, A.; Gong, Q.; Mahadevan, S.; Halverson, S. P.; Roy, A.; Terrien, R. C.; Robertson, P. M.; Hearty, F. R.; Levi, E. I.; Monson, A. J. (2016-08-09). Evans, Christopher J.; Simard, Luc; Takami, Hideki (eds.). "Design of NEID, an extreme precision Doppler spectrograph for WIYN". Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VI. International Society for Optics and Photonics. 9908: 99087H. Bibcode:2016SPIE.9908E..7HS. doi:10.1117/12.2234411. hdl:2060/20180004146. S2CID 126123875.
  9. ^ Logsdon, Sarah E.; McElwain, Michael W.; Gong, Qian; Liang, Ming; Santoro, Fernando; Schwab, Christian; Bender, Chad; Blake, Cullen; Halverson, Samuel; Hearty, Fred; Hunting, Emily (2018-07-27). "The NEID precision radial velocity spectrometer: Port adapter overview, requirements, and test plan". In Simard, Luc; Evans, Christopher J.; Takami, Hideki (eds.). Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII. Vol. 10702. International Society for Optics and Photonics. p. 1070267. Bibcode:2018SPIE10702E..67L. doi:10.1117/12.2312209. hdl:2060/20190002459. ISBN 9781510619579. S2CID 126365687.
  10. ^ "Hunting for Alien Planets – Latest News – Texas Advanced Computing Center". www.tacc.utexas.edu. Retrieved 2021-11-09.
  11. ^ Burke, Barry E.; Tonry, John; Cooper, Michael; Luppino, Gerard; Jacoby, George; Bredthauer, Richard; Boggs, Kasey; Lesser, Michael; Onaka, Peter; Young, Douglas; Doherty, Peter (2004-09-29). Garnett, James D.; Beletic, James W. (eds.). "The orthogonal-transfer array: a new CCD architecture for astronomy". Optical and Infrared Detectors for Astronomy. International Society for Optics and Photonics. 5499: 185–192. Bibcode:2004SPIE.5499..185B. doi:10.1117/12.562490. S2CID 34954322.
  12. ^ Harbeck, Daniel R.; Lesser, Mike; Liu, Wilson; Stupak, Bob; George, Ron; Harris, Ron; Poczulp, Gary; Rajagopal, Jayadev; Kotulla, Ralf; Ouellete, David; Hooper, Eric J. (2018-07-06). "The WIYN one degree imager in 2018: An extended 30-detector focal plane". In Simard, Luc; Evans, Christopher J; Takami, Hideki (eds.). Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII. Vol. 10702. International Society for Optics and Photonics. p. 1070229. arXiv:1806.01913. Bibcode:2018SPIE10702E..29H. doi:10.1117/12.2311528. ISBN 9781510619579. S2CID 119078797.

External links edit

  •   Media related to WIYN Observatory at Wikimedia Commons
  • WIYN Observatory – official site.
  • Abell 39 image by WIYN

wiyn, observatory, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources WIYN Observatory news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The WIYN Observatory is owned and operated by the WIYN Consortium Its 3 5 meter telescope is the second largest optical telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona Most of the capital costs for the observatory were provided by the University of Wisconsin Madison Indiana University and Yale University while the National Optical Astronomy Observatory NOAO provides most of the operating services The NOAO is an institution of the United States it is the national optical observatory program and supports a collection of ground based telescopes at Kitt Peak where WIYN is located as well as other locations WIYN TelescopePart ofKitt Peak National Observatory Location s ArizonaCoordinates31 57 27 N 111 36 04 W 31 9575 N 111 601 W 31 9575 111 601OrganizationWIYN Consortium Built 1994 1994 Telescope styleoptical telescope Diameter3 498 85 mm 11 ft 5 750 in Collecting area9 6 m2 103 sq ft Focal length6 125 m 20 ft 1 1 in Mountingaltazimuth mount Enclosurerhombicuboctahedron Websitewww wbr wiyn wbr orgLocation of WIYN Observatory Related media on Commons edit on Wikidata Contents 1 Telescope 2 Current instrumentation 2 1 Hydra 2 2 NEID 2 3 One Degree Imager ODI 2 4 WIYN High Resolution InfraRed Camera WHIRC 3 Past no longer available instruments 3 1 Mini Mosaic 4 Governance 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksTelescope editWIYN is a Ritchey Chretien telescope with an altitude azimuth mount The lightweight borosilicate primary mirror has a diameter of 3 49885 m 137 75 and was manufactured at the Richard F Caris Mirror Lab 1 2 Sixty six active optics actuators support the primary mirror The telescope is located in a half Rhombicuboctahedron dome Current instrumentation editHydra edit Hydra is a multiobject spectrograph using fiber optics robotically positioned in the focal plane to allow up to 100 separate objects to be observed at a time The light is guided to a spectrograph room under the main telescope where a CCD camera records the spectrum of each object The field of view is approximately 1 degree 1 Hydra has been operating since 1990 3 It was originally located at the Nicholas U Mayall Telescope before being moved to WIYN in 1994 4 In 2021 Hydra received a major upgrade to the gripper fiber positioning robot NEID edit Funded by the NN EXPLORE collaboration between NASA and the National Science Foundation the NEID spectrograph searches for extra solar planets by looking for minute variations in the radial velocity of the host star caused by the orbiting planet s 5 The extremely precise radial velocities 50 cm s provided by NEID will provide masses and densities for exoplanets discovered by the TESS space telescope 6 The name NEID comes from the Tohono Oʼodham word for to see 7 The spectrograph was designed and built at Pennsylvania State University with the construction beginning in 2016 8 The Port Adapter portion of the instrument which provides guiding focus correction fast tip tilt correction and atmospheric dispersion correction to the starlight before injecting it into the optical fiber feeding the spectrograph was built by the University of Wisconsin in collaboration with NOAO 9 On June 2 2021 NEID completed commissioning The NEID is also assisted by The Texas Advanced Computing Center TACC with super computer time and expertise in the scientific search for new exoplanets 10 One Degree Imager ODI edit nbsp ODI SensorThe One Degree Imager ODI is the flagship of WIYN s new instrument initiatives ODI utilizes both WIYN s one degree field of view and excellent image quality The original design for ODI was to cover the one square degree field using a total of 64 Orthogonal Transfer Arrays OTAs with a total of 1 GigaPixel and a pixelscale of 0 11 arcseconds per pixel Orthogonal transfer arrays allow to actively improve image sharpness by correcting images for tip tilt motion during the integration 11 Corrections will be done over the entire field of view making ODI a unique and competitive instrument in the era of wide field surveys ODI is funded by the WIYN partners and the National Science Foundation ODI was first commissioned in a partial or prototype configuration pODI using 13 OTAs in the summer of 2012 and was available for science observations since early 2013 pODI was decommissioned in late 2014 to undergo a significant upgrade The upgraded ODI now using 30 OTAs in a 5x6 layout was recommissioned in summer 2015 and has been available for science observations since October 2015 12 WIYN High Resolution InfraRed Camera WHIRC edit WHIRC is a near infrared high resolution imaging camera commissioned in 2008 WHIRC was a joint project between the WIYN partners and STScI It consists of a 2k 2k detector providing an excellent pixel scale of 0 1 pixel and a field of view of 200 200 arcsec WHIRC can be used with the WIYN Tip Tilt Module WTTM to provide exquisite high resolution images A large set of filters is available Past no longer available instruments editMini Mosaic edit MiniMo is a CCD consisting of two 2048 4096 pixel chips with a field of view of 9 6 arcminutes The two separate chips allow for faster readout of the image than would have been otherwise possible as they can be read out simultaneously 2 Governance editThe WIYN Consortium is governed by a board of directors which includes three members of each partner institution The board meets twice a year The Science Steering Committee provides scientific guidance to the board and the WIYN director From 2000 to 2008 the WIYN director was George Jacoby followed by Pierre Martin 2008 2010 From 2010 to 2013 Pat Knezek served as interim director Since 2013 Eric Hooper UW Madison has served as interim director Yale University withdrew from the WIYN consortium on April 1 2014 and was replaced by the University of Missouri in the fall of that year In 2015 a NASA NSF partnership called NN EXPLORE effectively took over NOAO s share although NOAO still manages the operations See also editList of astronomical observatories List of largest optical reflecting telescopes List of the largest optical telescopes in the contiguous United StatesReferences edit Johns Matthew W Blanco Daniel R 1994 06 01 Stepp Larry M ed WIYN 3 5 meter telescope project Advanced Technology Optical Telescopes V International Society for Optics and Photonics 2199 2 9 Bibcode 1994SPIE 2199 2J doi 10 1117 12 176153 S2CID 109482491 WIYN 3 5m Observatory www wiyn org Retrieved 2021 06 04 Barden Samuel Charles Rudeen Andy C 1990 07 01 Crawford David L ed Kitt Peak National Observatory fiber actuator device Instrumentation in Astronomy VII International Society for Optics and Photonics 1235 729 735 Bibcode 1990SPIE 1235 729B doi 10 1117 12 19136 S2CID 123032688 Barden Samuel Charles Armandroff Taft Muller Gary P Rudeen Andy C Lewis Jeff L Groves Lee 1994 06 01 Crawford David L Craine Eric R eds Modifying Hydra for the WIYN telescope an optimum telescope fiber MOS combination Instrumentation in Astronomy VIII International Society for Optics and Photonics 2198 87 97 Bibcode 1994SPIE 2198 87B doi 10 1117 12 176816 S2CID 121200545 A WIYN win partnership The Planetary Society Retrieved 2021 06 04 What is NEID The NEID Spectrograph neid psu edu Retrieved 2021 06 04 New Instrument for WIYN NEID ast noao edu ast noao edu Retrieved 2021 06 04 Schwab C Rakich A Gong Q Mahadevan S Halverson S P Roy A Terrien R C Robertson P M Hearty F R Levi E I Monson A J 2016 08 09 Evans Christopher J Simard Luc Takami Hideki eds Design of NEID an extreme precision Doppler spectrograph for WIYN Ground based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VI International Society for Optics and Photonics 9908 99087H Bibcode 2016SPIE 9908E 7HS doi 10 1117 12 2234411 hdl 2060 20180004146 S2CID 126123875 Logsdon Sarah E McElwain Michael W Gong Qian Liang Ming Santoro Fernando Schwab Christian Bender Chad Blake Cullen Halverson Samuel Hearty Fred Hunting Emily 2018 07 27 The NEID precision radial velocity spectrometer Port adapter overview requirements and test plan In Simard Luc Evans Christopher J Takami Hideki eds Ground based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII Vol 10702 International Society for Optics and Photonics p 1070267 Bibcode 2018SPIE10702E 67L doi 10 1117 12 2312209 hdl 2060 20190002459 ISBN 9781510619579 S2CID 126365687 Hunting for Alien Planets Latest News Texas Advanced Computing Center www tacc utexas edu Retrieved 2021 11 09 Burke Barry E Tonry John Cooper Michael Luppino Gerard Jacoby George Bredthauer Richard Boggs Kasey Lesser Michael Onaka Peter Young Douglas Doherty Peter 2004 09 29 Garnett James D Beletic James W eds The orthogonal transfer array a new CCD architecture for astronomy Optical and Infrared Detectors for Astronomy International Society for Optics and Photonics 5499 185 192 Bibcode 2004SPIE 5499 185B doi 10 1117 12 562490 S2CID 34954322 Harbeck Daniel R Lesser Mike Liu Wilson Stupak Bob George Ron Harris Ron Poczulp Gary Rajagopal Jayadev Kotulla Ralf Ouellete David Hooper Eric J 2018 07 06 The WIYN one degree imager in 2018 An extended 30 detector focal plane In Simard Luc Evans Christopher J Takami Hideki eds Ground based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII Vol 10702 International Society for Optics and Photonics p 1070229 arXiv 1806 01913 Bibcode 2018SPIE10702E 29H doi 10 1117 12 2311528 ISBN 9781510619579 S2CID 119078797 External links edit nbsp Media related to WIYN Observatory at Wikimedia Commons WIYN Observatory official site Abell 39 image by WIYNPortals nbsp Arizona nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System nbsp Education nbsp Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WIYN Observatory amp oldid 1172390726, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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