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Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012
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Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

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Page 1: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers

Prof. Stephen Eikenberry

University of Florida

19 April 2012

Page 2: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

HSI: Why bother?• Easy answer: when you want spectroscopic

info over a 2D field …• Harder question: when do you use dispersed

spectroscopy instead of narrowband filters?• Answer: for a given detector format, you

have a limited number of pixels (i.e. 2Kx2K)– IFUs have ~1000 spatial elements with 1000

spectral elements each, simultaneously– Narrowband imagers have ~1M spatial elements

and 1 spectral element

Page 3: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

Integral Field Spectroscopy: fibers

Page 4: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

IFS: Slicers

Page 5: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

IFS: slicers

Page 6: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

IFS: slicers

Page 7: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FISICA: IFS Slicer Example• FISICA is a fully-cryogenic large-format, seeing-

limited image-slicing integral field unit (IFU) for the FLAMINGOS spectrograph, designed for f/15-ish telescopes

• Advanced Image Slicer (“Content”) concept• Led by S. Eikenberry, R. Elston, and R. Guzman at

University of Florida• 22-slices, field-of-view 15x32 arcsec (KPNO 4-m f/15),

or 5x11 arcsec (GTC f/17 focus)• Spatial sampling 0.70” (0.35”/pix) on KPNO & 0.23”

(0.12”/pix) on GTC; 960 spatial resolution elements• R~1300 spectroscopy over 1-2.4 microns (select J+H or

H+K band for individual spectra)

Page 8: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FISICA Concept• FLAMINGOS is a fully-

cryogenic near-IR multi-object spectrograph

• Build an IFU which fits inside a clone of the “MOS” dewar

• FLAMINGOS will “think” it is observing through a strange MOS slit pattern

• Very well-defined (and tight) constraints on opto-mechanical envelopes

Page 9: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

Optical Design Layout

Page 10: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

Opto-Mechanical Approach•Strong desire to use “monolithic” mirror arrays (following the UF “bolt-and-go” approach) – robust, and no alignment needed•66 mirrors in 3 pieces of material

•All-aluminum 6061-T6 construction (provides homologous contraction, thus can test alignment/focus warm/optical)

•All-spherical surfaces (aspheric possible, but this was a first try)

•Careful iteration between optical design and mechanical design, including tool path for diamond-turning fabrication

Page 11: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

Mechanical Layout

Page 12: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FISICA Fabrication•Slicer mirror

•22 slices

•0.4x19-mm each

Page 13: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FISICA Fabrication

•Pupil mirror

•2x11array

•~9-mm dia. each

•Integrated with fold flat

Page 14: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FISICA Fabrication

•Field mirror

•22x1 array; non-constant radii of curvature (by design!)

•~9-mm dia. each

Page 15: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FISICA Fabrication

Page 16: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FISICA Integration

Page 17: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FISICA Integration• All-aluminum (6061-T6) construction allowed warm

testing of optical system• Bench tests indicate all 71 mirrors (69 w/power)

aligned within tolerances on 1st assembly – no adjustment needed

• Telecentricity close to, but not quite at, goal• Integration and cold tests in April/May 2004

Page 18: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FISICA Integration: Telecentricity

-0.02-0.015

-0.01-0.005

00.005

0.010.015

0.02

X (radians)

-0.02

-0.015

-0.01

-0.005

0

0.005

0.01

0.015

0.02

Y (

rad

ian

s)

Telecentricity at +x field posn

-0.02-0.015

-0.01-0.005

00.005

0.010.015

0.02

X (radians)

-0.02

-0.015

-0.01

-0.005

0

0.005

0.01

0.015

0.02

Y (

rad

ian

s)

Telecentricity at -x field posn

•Telecentricity goal of <0.005-radians

•Not quite there – some (few %) vignetting at FLAMINGOS pupil stop for some field positions

Page 19: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FISICA Integration

Page 20: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FISICA Works!

•First light on KPNO 4-m telescope in July 2004

•Image reconstruction ~0.9-arcsec FWHM in J-band, limited by seeing (hurray !!); in May 05 had ~0.7” FWHM

•Note that large, rectangular field allows AB-nod “on-chip” for targets as large as ~15-arcsec

Page 21: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

Early Science: NGC 1569

•Starburst dwarf galaxy with 3 Super Star Clusters (SSCs)

•FISICA reconstructed image shows young windy massive stars near the SSCs, but mostly OUTSIDE them

•HeI 1.083m (blue); Pa (red); continuum (green)

•Raw sky-subtracted image reconstruction (not flatfielded yet)

HST - visible FLAMINGOS - Ks FISICA – Oct04

Page 22: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

Children of FISICA: FRIDA

•Adaptive Optics-fed IFS/imager for Gran Telescopio Canarias 10.4-meter

•Operates at the diffraction limit of the telescope (resolutions of ~20 mas or ~100 nanoradians

Page 23: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FRIDA/FISICA Similarities

• Fundamental similarities:

• Monolithic approach to mirror arrays

• Similar structural approach – all 6061-T6 aluminum structures

• Same basic team/expertise

• Maximizes utilization of “lessons learned”

Page 24: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FRIDA/FISICA Differences

•Slightly different format for IFU• approach same as FISICA

• overall size/scale of mirrors mechanically very similar

•Geometric aberration requirements tighter (high Strehl):• 2-mirror anastigmat relay approach

• but, direct heritage from FISICA easy to fab/align

•Surface roughness requirements tighter (low scatter):• FISICA dominated by SiO2 inclusions in 6061-T6

• FISICA roughness OK, but not great for FRIDA

• Investigate different material/coating for FRIDA

Page 25: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FRIDA Materials Test Conclusions• Electroless Nickel with Al substrate is a “standard”

diamond-turned material with excellent roughness ( 3nm RMS)

• As expected, this material DOES experience measurable cryo-deformation from bimetallic stresses, seen as edge rollup

• However, the amplitude is small (P-V ~0.07 HeNe)

• All FRIDA mirrors/arrays will/can be slightly oversized to avoid edge effect P-V ~0.016 HeNe

• Thus, Ni/Al mirrors will meet all FRIDA performance requirements

Page 26: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FRIDA IFU Mechanical Design

• Bench-mounted Nasmyth environment (fixed gravity vector)

• Much easier than FISICA (flexure, and thermal too)

Page 27: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

FRIDA IFU Mirrors

Page 28: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

Back to HSI:Imaging vs. Spectroscopy

• If you need relatively few spectral channels (i.e. 1, up to ~4-5) and large areal field of view, can use narrowband filters and multiple detectors with dichroics

• But, if you need MANY spectral channels (i.e. 5 to >1000), best use of detector area is probably dispersed spectroscopy

Page 29: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

IFS vs. Long-slit Spectroscopy - I

• If your target is large compared to the angular length of a typical slit (i.e. linear FOV ~1000 times the angular resolution element), can use a simple long-slit spectrograph and “push-broom” across the image•But, if your region of interest is large in area but small in linear extent, IFS can cover it more efficiently (by factors up to ~30 or more in scan time)!

Page 30: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

IFS vs. Long-slit Spectroscopy - II

• If your target is steady in flux/position/etc. over the 2-D scan time, can use a simple long-slit spectrograph and “push-broom” across the image

•But, if your target is time-variable or moves on the scan timescale, IFS “freezes” the motions/variations and captures a 2D spectrum instantaneously!

Page 31: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

IFS vs. Long-slit Spectroscopy - III

• If your detector format/geometry matches your needs for combining FOV with wavelength coverage, then can use a simple long-slit spectrograph and “push-broom” across the image

•But, if your FOV*bandpass needs differ, IFS can allow “optical flexibility” in slit placement/geometry on the detector, and may allow different combinations of FOV and bandpass than available for longslit

Page 32: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

Slicers vs. Fibers for IFS•Optical fibers have reasonable transmission at optical wavelengths out to ~1.5µm or so•Most fibers do NOT transmit well at wavelengths >2µm, and the ones that transmit at all are delicate and expensive rare-earth-based fibers•Slicers work well down to wavelengths of ~500nm (well into the optical bandpass), and work very well out to wavelengths of 100µm and beyond•Mirrors are the ultimate “achromatic” optic•Slicers can be VERY robust (solid aluminum construction and/or combine Al mirrors with carbon fiber structures for lighter weight) and VERY compact

Page 33: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

Ultra-compact Slicer IFS•New concept developed by SSE at UF for astrophysics (smallsat) and remote sensing (space or UAV) applications•Full size ~10x10x10cm for COMBINED slicer and spectrograph, with mass ~1 kg•Can provide FOV from ~1 sq. arcmin to >10 sq. degree, with resolutions from ~1-arcsec to ~0.1-deg, depending on input optics•Spectral resolutions (R / ()) ranging from ~100 to >20,000•Can operate over wavelength ranges from ~0.5 µm out to >100µm

Page 34: Hyper-Spectral Imaging with Image Slicers Prof. Stephen Eikenberry University of Florida 19 April 2012.

Conclusions• Image-slicing integral field spectroscopy is a

maturing approach to HIS, particularly relevant for 2D fields of view with high spectral multiplexing requirements

• Monolithic diamond-turned mirror technology produces compact, mechanically robust, no-alignment-needed slicer units

• Existing slicers operate from visible light to far-infrared bandpasses

• Slicers can provide significant advantages over competing technologies (i.e. long-slit “push broom” spectrographs or fiber-fed integral fields)