Bibcode
Oscoz, Alejandro; Rebolo, Rafael; López, Roberto; Pérez-Garrido, Antonio; Pérez, Jorge Andrés; Hildebrandt, Sergi; Rodríguez, Luis Fernando; Piqueras, Juan José; Villó, Isidro; González, José Miguel; Barrena, Rafael; Gómez, Gabriel; García, Aníbal; Montañés, Pilar; Rosenberg, Alfred; Cadavid, Emilio; Calcines, Ariadna; Díaz-Sánchez, Anastasio; Kohley, Ralf; Martín, Yolanda; Peñate, José; Sánchez, Vicente
Bibliographical reference
Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy II. Edited by McLean, Ian S.; Casali, Mark M. Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 7014, pp. 701447-701447-12 (2008).
Advertised on:
8
2008
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
FastCam is an instrument jointly developed by the Spanish Instituto de
Astrofísica de Canarias and the Universidad Politécnica de
Cartagena designed to obtain high spatial resolution images in the
optical wavelength range from ground-based telescopes. The instrument
consists of a very low noise and very fast readout speed EMCCD camera
capable of reaching the diffraction limit of medium-sized telescopes
from 500 to 850 nm. FastCam incorporates a FPGAs-based device to save
and evaluate those images minimally disturbed by atmospheric turbulence
in real time. The undisturbed images represent a small fraction of the
observations. Therefore, a special software package has been developed
to extract, from cubes of tens of thousands of images, those with better
quality than a given level. This is done in parallel with the data
acquisition at the telescope. After the first tests in the laboratory,
FastCam has been successfully tested in three telescopes: the 1.52-meter
TCS (Teide Observatory), the 2.5-meter NOT, and the 4.2-meter WHT (Roque
de los Muchachos Observatory). The theoretical diffraction limit of each
telescope has been reached in the I band (850 nm) -0.15, 0.08 and 0.05
arcsec, respectively-, and similar resolutions have been also obtained
in the V and R bands. Future work will include the development of a new
instrument for the 10.4-meter GTC telescope on La Palma.