Title: The%20Imaging%20Chain%20in%20Optical%20Astronomy
1The Imaging Chain in Optical Astronomy
2Review and Overview
- Imaging Chain includes these elements
- energy source
- object
- collector
- detector (or sensor)
- processor
- display
- analysis
- storage (if any)
3Optical Imaging Chain
1 source
5 processing
6 display 7 analysis
3 collector 4 sensor
2 object
4Source and/or Object
- In astronomy, the source of energy (1) and the
object (2) are almost always one and the same! - i.e., The object emits the light
- Examples
- Galaxies
- Stars
- Exceptions
- Planets and the moon
- Dust and gas that reflects or absorbs starlight
5Optical Imaging Chain in Astronomy
5 processing
1 source 2 object
6 display 7 analysis
3 collector 4 sensor
8 storage
6Imaging Chain in Radio Astronomy
1,2
7Specific Requirements for Astronomical Imaging
Systems
- Requirements always conflict
- Always want more than you can have
- must trade off desirable attributes
- Deciding the relative merits is a difficult task
- general-purpose instruments (cameras) may not
be sufficient - Want simultaneously to have
- excellent angular resolution AND wide field of
view - high sensitivity AND wide dynamic range
- Dynamic range is the ability to image bright
and faint sources - broad wavelength coverage AND ability to measure
light intensities at specific wavelengths
8Angular Resolution vs. Field of View
- Angular Resolution ability to distinguish
sources that are separated by small angles - Limited by
- Optical Diffraction
- Sensor Resolution
- Field of View angular size of the image field
- Limited by
- Optics
- Sensor Size (area)
9Sensitivity vs. Dynamic Range
- Sensitivity
- ability to measure faint brightnesses
- Dynamic Range
- ability to image bright and faint sources in
same system
10Wavelength Coverage vs. Spectral Resolution
- Wavelength Coverage
- Ability to image over a wide range of wavelengths
- Limited by
- Spectral Transmission of Optics (Glass cuts off
UV, far IR) - Spectral Resolution
- Ability to detect and measure light intensities
at specific wavelengths - Limited by
- Spectrometer Resolution (for ex., number of
lines in a diffraction grating)
11Optical Collector (Link 3)
12Optical Collection (Link 3) Refracting
Telescopes
- Lenses collect light
- BIG disadvantages
- Chromatic Aberrations (due to dispersion of
glass) - Lenses are HEAVY and supported only on periphery
- Limits the Lens Diameter
- Largest is 40" at Yerkes Observatory, Wisconsin
http//astro.uchicago.edu/vtour/40inch/kyle3.jpg
13Optical Collection (Link 3) Reflecting
Telescopes
- Mirrors collect light
- Chromatic Aberrations eliminated
- Fabrication techniques continue to improve
- Mirrors may be supported from behind
- ? Mirrors may be made much larger than refractive
lenses
14Optical Reflecting Telescopes
- Concave parabolic primary mirror to collect light
from source - modern mirrors for large telescopes are thin,
lightweight deformable, to optimize image
quality
3.5 meter WIYN telescope mirror, Kitt Peak,
Arizona
15Thin and Light (Weight) Mirrors
- Light weight ?Easier to point
- light-duty mechanical systems ? cheaper
- Thin Glass ? Less Thermal Mass
- Reaches Equilibrium (cools down to ambient
temperature) quicker
16Hale 200" TelescopePalomar Mountain, CA
http//www.cmog.org/page.cfm?page374
http//www.astro.caltech.edu/observatories/palomar
/overview.html
17200" mirror (5 meters)for Hale Telescope
- Monolith (one piece)
- Several feet thick
- 10 months to cool
- 7.5 years to grind
- Mirror weighs 20 tons
- Telescope weighs 400 tons
- Equatorial Mount
- follows sky with one motion
18Keck telescopes, Mauna Kea, HI
http//www2.keck.hawaii.edu/geninfo/about.html
19400" mirror (10 meters)for Keck Telescope
- 36 segments
- 3" thick
- Each segment weighs 400 kg (880 pounds)
- Total weight of mirror is 14,400 kg (lt 15 tons)
- Telescope weighs 270 tons
- Alt-azimuth mount (left-right, up-down motion)
- follows sky with two motions rotation
20Basic Designs of Optical Reflecting Telescopes
- Prime focus light focused by primary mirror
alone - Newtonian use flat, diagonal secondary mirror to
deflect light out side of tube - Cassegrain use convex secondary mirror to
reflect light back through hole in primary - Nasmyth (or Coudé) focus (coudé ? French for
bend or elbow) uses a tertiary mirror to
redirect light to external instruments (e.g., a
spectrograph)
21Prime Focus
f
Sensor
Mirror diameter must be large to ensure
that obstruction is not significant
22Newtonian Reflector
Sensor
23Cassegrain Telescope
Sensor
Secondary Convex Mirror
24Feature of Cassegrain Telescope
- Long Focal Length in Short Tube
f
Location of Equivalent Thin Lens
25Coudé or Nasmyth Telescope
Sensor
26Optical Reflecting Telescopes
Schematic of 10-meter Keck telescope (segmented
mirror)
27Large Optical Telescopes
- Telescopes with largest diameters
- (in use or under construction
- 10-meter Keck (Mauna Kea, Hawaii)
- 8-meter Subaru (Mauna Kea)
- 8-meter Gemini (twin telescopes Mauna Kea
Cerro Pachon, Chile) - 6.5-meter Mt. Hopkins (Arizona)
- 5-meter Mt. Palomar (California)
- 4-meter NOAO (Kitt Peak, AZ Cerro Tololo,
Chile) - http//seds.lpl.arizona.edu/billa/bigeyes.html
Keck telescope mirror (note person)
Summit of Mauna Kea, with Maui in background
28Why Build Large Telescopes?
- Larger Aperture ? Gathers MORE Light
- Light-Gathering Power ? Area
- Area of Circular Aperture ?D2 / 4 ? D2
- D diameter of primary collecting element
- Larger aperture ? better angular resolution
- recall that
29Why Build Small Telescopes?
- Smaller aperture ? collects less light
- ? less chance of saturation (overexposure) on
bright sources - Smaller aperture ? larger field of view
(generally) - Determined by F ratio or F
- f focal length of collecting element
- D diameter of aperture
30F Ratio F
- F describes the ability of the optic to
deflect or focus light - Smaller F ? optic deflects light more than
system with larger F
Small F
Large F
31F of Large Telescopes
- Hale 200" on Palomar f/3.3
- focal length of primary mirror is
- 3.3 ? 200" 660" 55' ? 16.8 m
- Dome must be large enough to enclose
- Keck 10-m on Mauna Kea f/1.75
- focal length of primary mirror is
- 1.75 ? 10m 17.5 m ? 58 feet
32F Ratio F
- Two reflecting telescopes with different F and
same detector have different Fields of View
large ??
small ??
Small F
Large F
33Sensors (Link 4)
34Astronomical CamerasUsually Include
- Spectral Filters
- most experiments require specific wavelength
range(s) - broad-band or narrow-band
- Reimaging Optics
- enlarge or reduce image formed by primary
collecting element - Light-Sensitive Detector Sensor
35Astronomical Sensors (visual wavelengths)
- Most common detectors
- Human Eye
- Photographic Emulsion
- film
- plates
- Electronic Sensors
- CCDs
36Angular Resolution
- Fundamental Limit due to Diffraction in Optical
Collector (Link 3) - But Also Limited by Resolution of Sensor!
37Charge-Coupled Devices (CCDs)
- Standard light detection medium for BOTH
professional and amateur astronomical imaging
systems - Significant decrease in price
- numerous advantages over film
- high quantum efficiency (QE)
- meaning most of the photons incident on CCD are
counted - linear response
- measured signal is proportional to number of
photons collected - fast processing turnaround (CCD readout speeds 1
sec) - NO development of emulsion!
- regular grid of sensor elements (pixels)
- as opposed to random distribution of AgX grains
- image delivered in computer-ready form
38CCD Basics
- Light-sensitive electronic element based on
crystalline silicon - crystal lattice of atoms at regular spacings
- acts as though electrons have two states
- bound to atom
- free to roam through lattice
39CCD Basics
- Incident photon adds energy to electron to kick
it up into the free states - energy of photon must be sufficiently large for
electron to reach the free states - to be absorbed by CCDs silicon, the photon
wavelength ? must be less than maximum ?max ?
1100 nm (near infrared)
40CCD Basics
- Silicon structure is divided into pixels
- e- transferred and counted one pixel at a time
http//www.byte.com/art/9510/img/505099d2.htm
41Sensor Resolution
- Obvious for Electronic Sensors (e.g., CCDs)
- Elements have finite size
- Light is summed over area
- of sensor element (integrated)
- Light from two stars that falls on
- same element is added together
- stars cannot be distinguished
- in image!
?x
42Same Effect in Photographic Emulsions
- More difficult to quantify
- Light-sensitive grains of silver
- halide in the emulsion
- Placed randomly in emulsion
- Random sizes
- large grains are more sensitive
- (respond to few photons)
- small grains produce better
- resolution
43Photographic techniquessilver halide
- Film
- Emulsion on flexible substrate
- Still used by amateurs using sensitive film
- BW and color
- Special treatment to increase sensitivity
- Photographic Plates
- Emulsion on glass plates
- Most common detector from earliest development of
AgX techniques until CCDs in late 70s
44Eye as Astronomical Detector
- Eye includes its own lens
- focuses light on retina ( sensor)
- When used with a telescope, must add yet another
lens - redirect rays from primary optic
- make them parallel (collimated)
- rays appear to come from infinity (infinite
distance away) - reimaging is performed by eyepiece
45Eye with Telescope
With Eyepiece Light entering eye is collimated
46Eye as Astronomical Detector
- Point sources (stars) appear brighter to eye
through telescope - Factor is
- D is telescope diameter
- P is diameter of eye pupil
- Magnification should make light fill the eye
pupil (exit pupil) - Extended sources (for example, nebulae) do not
appear brighter through a telescope - Gain in light gathering power exactly compensated
by image magnification, spreads light out over
larger angle.
47Atmospheric Effects on Image
- Large role in ground-based optical astronomy
- scintillation modifies source angular size
- twinkling of stars smearing of point sources
- extinction reduces light intensity
- atmosphere scatters a small amount of light,
especially at short (bluer) wavelengths - water vapor blocks specific wavelengths,
especially near-IR - scattered light produces interfering background
- astronomical images are never limited to light
from source alone always include source
background sky - light pollution worsens sky background
48Scattering
- Wavelength Dependent
- Depends on color of light
- Long wavelengths are scattered less
49Scattering by Molecules
- Molecules are SMALL
- Blue light is scattered MUCH more than red
light - Reason for BOTH
- blue sky (blue light scattered from sun in all
directions) - red sunset (blue light is scattered out of the
suns direct rays)
50Scattering by Dust
- Dust particles are MUCH larger than molecules
- e.g., from volcanos, dust storms
- Blue light is scattered by dust somewhat more
than red light
51Link 5 Image Processing
52Link 5 Image Processing
- Formerly performed in darkroom
- e.g., David Malins Unsharp Masking
- Subtract a blurred copy from a sharp positive
- (or, add a blurred negative to a sharp
positive) - Now performed in computers, e.g.,
- contrast enhancement
- sharpening
- normalization (background division)
-
53Example of Unsharp Masking
http//www.hawastsoc.org/messier/fslide53.html
http//www.seds.org/messier/m/m042.html
Unprocessed
After Unsharp Masking
n.b., Increased visibility of fine structure in
bright and dark regions of cloud after unsharp
masking
54Blurring vs. Sharpening
- Blurring
- Local Averaging of Pixels in Scene
- Averages out fine detail in image more than
large-scale structure - Sharpening
- Inverse of Blurring ? Local Differencing of
Pixels
55Image Processing to Correct for
- Atmosphere (to extent possible)
- e.g., images obtained of object at different
heights in sky exhibit different atmospheric
extinction - images usually can be corrected to compare
brightnesses - CCD defects and artifacts
- dark current
- Pixel gives output response even when not exposed
to light - Bad pixels
- Due to manufacturing flaws
- Dead, Hot, Flickering (time-variable
response) - Variations in pixel-to-pixel sensitivity
- every pixel has its own Quantum Efficiency (QE)
- Characterized by measuring response to uniform
flat field and subsequently divided out
56Links 6 and 7Image Display and Analysis
57Image Display and Analysis
- This step often is where astronomy really begins.
- Type and extent of display and analysis depends
on purpose of imaging experiment - Common examples
- evaluating whether an object has been detected or
not - determining total CCD signal (counts) for an
object, such as a star - determining relative intensities of an object
from images at two different wavelengths - determining relative sizes of an extended object
from images at two different wavelengths
58Link 8 Storage
59Storage
- Glass plates
- Requires MUCH climate-controlled storage space
- Expensive to store and retrieve
- available to one user at a time
- now being digitized (scanned), as in the
archive you use with DS9 - Digital Images
- Lots of disk space
- cheaper all the time
- available to many users
60Objects with Large Luminosities can be Detected
at Large Distances
Lines of constant apparent brightness
61Distant Objects are Usually Physically Larger
62Angular Sizes Span Wide Range