The HERMES high-resolution spectrograph project aims at exploiting the specific potential of small but flexible telescopes in observational astrophysics. The optimised optical design of the spectrograph is based on the well-proven concept of white-pupil beam folding for high-resolution spectroscopy. In this contribution we present the complete project, including the spectrograph design and procurement details, the telescope adaptor and calibration unit, the detector system, as well as the optimised data-reduction pipeline. We present a detailed performance analysis to show that the spectrograph performs as specified both in optical quality and in total efficiency. With a spectral resolution of 85 000 (63 000 for the low-resolution fibre), a spectral coverage from 377 to 900 nm in a single exposure and a peak efficiency of 28%, HERMES proves to be an ideal instrument for building up time series of high-quality data of variable (stellar) phenomena.
The redshifts of all cosmologically distant sources are expected to experience a small, systematic drift as a function of time due to the evolution of the Universe's expansion rate. A measurement of this effect would represent a direct and entirely model-independent determination of the expansion history of the Universe over a redshift range that is inaccessible to other methods. Here we investigate the impact of the next generation of Extremely Large Telescopes on the feasibility of detecting and characterising the cosmological redshift drift. We consider the Lyman alpha forest in the redshift range 2 < z < 5 and other absorption lines in the spectra of high redshift QSOs as the most suitable targets for a redshift drift experiment. Assuming photon-noise limited observations and using extensive Monte Carlo simulations we determine the accuracy to which the redshift drift can be measured from the Ly alpha forest as a function of signal-to-noise and redshift. Based on this relation and using the brightness and redshift distributions of known QSOs we find that a 42-m telescope is capable of unambiguously detecting the redshift drift over a period of ~20 yr using 4000 h of observing time. Such an experiment would provide independent evidence for the existence of dark energy without assuming spatial flatness, using any other cosmological constraints or making any other astrophysical assumption.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 27 pages, 19 figure
Ultra-hot giant exoplanets receive thousands of times Earth’s insolation 1 , 2 . Their high-temperature atmospheres (>2,000 K) are ideal laboratories for studying extreme planetary climates and chemistry 3 – 5 . Daysides are predicted to be cloud-free, dominated by atomic species 6 and substantially hotter than nightsides 5 , 7 , 8 . Atoms are expected to recombine into molecules over the nightside 9 , resulting in different day-night chemistry. While metallic elements and a large temperature contrast have been observed 10 – 14 , no chemical gradient has been measured across the surface of such an exoplanet. Different atmospheric chemistry between the day-to-night (“evening”) and night-to-day (“morning”) terminators could, however, be revealed as an asymmetric absorption signature during transit 4 , 7 , 15 . Here, we report the detection of an asymmetric atmospheric signature in the ultra-hot exoplanet WASP-76b. We spectrally and temporally resolve this signature thanks to the combination of high-dispersion spectroscopy with a large photon-collecting area. The absorption signal, attributed to neutral iron, is blueshifted by −11±0.7 km s -1 on the trailing limb, which can be explained by a combination of planetary rotation and wind blowing from the hot dayside 16 . In contrast, no signal arises from the nightside close to the morning terminator, showing that atomic iron is not absorbing starlight there. Iron must thus condense during its journey across the nightside.
FEROS is a new fiber-fed bench-mounted prism-crossdispersed echelle spectrograph which has been recently cornmissioned at the ESO 1.52-rn telescope at La Silla. The opto-rnechanical concept and performance predictions have been presented by Kaufer & Pasquini.1 In this contribution we present the test results as obtained during two commissioning runs in October and December 1998. Special emphasis is given to the measured performances in efficiency, spectral resolution, straylight contamination, and spectral stability. The definite highlight of the FEROS instrument performance is the high peak detection quantum efficiency of 17% at 550nm (1%©360nm, 16%©440nm, 11%©790nm, 6%@9OOnm). These measured numbers include the 2-mirror telescope, the fiber link, the instrument, and the detector while the whole wavelength range is covered by a single exposure on a thinned EEV 2kx4k 15 micron pixel CCD and a constant resolving power of R = 48.000. In addition the FEROS instrument proved its high spectral stability by radial-velocity observations as carried out on the known radial-velocity standard star 7 Ceti over a time base of 2 months. By recording a calibration-lamp spectrum in parallel with the object spectrum and by the use of a simple cross-correlation technique, a rms of 21 rn/s has been obtained for a data set of 130 individual measurements. FEROS has been made available to the ESO community in January 1999.
FIES is a cross‐dispersed high‐resolution echelle spectrograph at the 2.56 m Nordic Optical Telescope (NOT), and was optimised for throughput and stability in 2006. The major 2006 upgrade involved the relocation of FIES to a stable environment and development of a fiber bundle that offers 3 different resolution modes, and made FIES an attractive tool for the user community of the NOT. Radial‐velocity stability is achieved through double‐chamber active temperature control. A dedicated data reduction tool, FIEStool, was developed. As a result of these upgrades, FIES is now one of the work‐horse instruments at the NOT. (© 2014 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)
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