A new tunable optical filter incorporated in a solar magrtetograph consists of an interference filter followed by three ataomatically controlled Fabry-P6rot interfcrometers. It has a spectral rcsolving power of 105, an angular resolution of 5" arc and a field angle of 30' arc for this spectral resolving power. By using auxiliary optics the angular resolution of the object may be improved at the expense of the angular field. Thus angular field ......... 6 arc rain (arc sec)-J. aL{gu]ar resolution It is operational over the range 400-650 nm and may be tuned through ~: 0.2 nm about the selected transmission band.
To determine the line profile of a Lyot-Ohman filter, an instrument with a spectral resolution greater than that of the filter is required, usually a grating spectrograph (VAN GRmTHUYS~N and HOUTGAST, 1959). Alternatively, we describe below the use of an automatically controlled scanning Fabry-Perot interferometer (RAMSAY, 1966) for this purpose.The plates of this interferometer are mounted on rods of the piezoelectric material barium titanate, the parallelism being controlled automatically independent of plate spacing using white-fight superposition fringes for testing purposes. In addition, the interferometer is equipped with a small, dimensionally stable wedge-shaped calibrated reference interferometer. The main interferometer can similarly be controlled to transmit the same wavelength as a selected aperture of this calibrated reference interferometer. Alternatively, if the interferometer is used in a scanning mode, the superposition fringes between the reference interferometer and the main working interferometer may be used for wavelength calibration during scanning. Further details of the interferometer are available in RAMSAY (1966).We have used this instrument in the scanning mode when testing birefringent filters. The filter is illuminated by collimated light from a Pointolite source and the transmitted radiation is scanned by the interferometer. The spectral content of the transmitted radiation (the line profile) is displayed on one channel of a two-pen recorder whilst the superposition fringes between the reference and working interferometers is displayed on the other channel. A typical result is shown in Figure 1. The overall operation is simple and rapid: the interpretation of the results is very convenient and the line profile can be plotted immediately an adjustment is made. The resolution of the interferometer may readily be chosen to suit the bandwidth of the filter under test.The method we have used to adjust our filters is as follows. Suppose the filter has two tunable elements, A and B, and let B have the higher resolving power. Effectively take B out of the system (by removing its appropriate polaroid), then rotate the polaroid which tunes A until the two pass-bands which appear are of the same amplitude. Note the orientation of the polaroid. Then rotate the polaroid approximately 180 ~ and repeat. Half-way between these two orientations is the position to which element A should be adjusted for synchronism with the preceding (lower resolution) elements. Bring element B into the system and rotate polaroid B until the side bands are again equal, repeating with B rotated through approximately 180 ~ Polaroid B Solar Physics 4 (1968) 476-478; 9 D. Reidel Publishing Company, Dordreeht-Holland
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