Title: Measuring Seeing, The Differential Image Motion Monitor (DIMM)
1Measuring Seeing, The Differential Image Motion
Monitor (DIMM)
- Marc Sarazin
- (European Southern Observatory)
2List of ThemesHow to find the ideal site...and
keep it good?
- Optical Propagation through Turbulence
- Mechanical and Thermal
- Index of Refraction
- Signature on ground based observations
- Correction methods
- Integral Monitoring Techniques
- Seeing Monitoring
- Scintillation Monitoring
- Profiling Techniques
- Microthermal Sensors
- Scintillation Ranging
- Modelling Techniques
-
3Why Differential Image Motion?
- The tracking errors are automatically subtracted
- The wind has no effect on the measurements
- The telescope optical quality is not important
(nevertheless circular images are required, i.e.
no coma allowed) - Easy to implement with state of the art amateur
astronomer detectors - The DIMM gives two statistical estimates of the
same variable
4Optical PropagationThe Signature of
Atmospheric Turbulence
Seeing (radian, ??-0.2)
Fried parameter ( meter, ??6/5)
5DIMM Principle
- Two images of the same star are created on a CCD,
corresponding to light having traveled through
two parallel columns in the atmosphere
6DIMM Principle
- The variance of the image motion through a
circular aperture of diameter D depends on the
seeing as
- The variance of the differential image motion
through circular apertures of diameter D,
separated by d is
7DIMM Principle
The final estimate of the seeing is the average
of both parallel and perpendicular motions
8DIMM Principle
- Error Budget for a 10 accuracy goal
- The instrumental noise (sampling, centroiding) is
measured in the lab on fixed sources. The
constant part can be subtracted out, the noise is
the remaining variance, about /- 0.002 pixel2,
or 5 relative error at 0.2 seeing. The plate
scale is calibrated on double stars of known
separation - The measurement noise might increase if the
signal to noise ratio is too low images with
low SNR due to scintillation have to be rejected. - The statistical noise is inversely proportional
to the square root of the number of samples in
the time series. The relative error on the seeing
is about 6 for 200 exposures. - The temporal under sampling due to too long
exposure time no way to correct for it because
the velocity of the tilt is unknown. Interlacing
two exposure times is the best way to control. - The very bad seeing (gt2) is over estimated
because the stellar image breaks into speckles
9DIMM Precursor
- A visual DIMM was used in the 60s for site
selection purposes in Chile and in Uzbekistan
(photo Maidanak Observatory). - See J. Stock and G. Keller, 1960, in Stars and
Stellar System, Vol. 1, Chicago University Press
10Portable DIMM Operation
- Preparing for nighttime measurements on the high
chilean sites (5200m) in the vicinity of the ALMA
project - Source Cornell Atacama project
http//astrosun.tn.cornell.edu/atacama
11Portable DIMM Operation
- Alignment of C11 telescope mount on a high
chilean site (5200m) in the vicinity of the ALMA
project - Pixel size0.7
- Pupil Diameter9cm
- Pupil Separation12cm
- Exposure Time10/20ms
- 50 frames/mn
- Photo credit P. Recabarren, Observatory of
Cordoba, Argentina
12Portable DIMM Operation
- 1m high platform and daytime protection of the
portable DIMM on the high chilean sites (5200m)
in the vicinity of the ALMA project - Source Cornell Atacama project
http//astrosun.tn.cornell.edu/atacama
13Portable DIMM Operation
- 5m high tower and daytime protection of the
portable DIMM at the observatory of Maidanak,
Uzbekistan
The telescope stands in free air circulation to
prevent build-up of local thermal pockets
14Automated DIMM Operation
- Daytime protection of the automated DIMM at the
VLT Observatory - The enclosure control is linked to the
meteorological station (closes when windgt18m/s,
Rhgt80)
15Automated DIMM Operation
- 35cm Telescope for the automated DIMM at the VLT
Observatory - Pixel size0.7
- Pupil Diameter11cm
- Pupil Separation20cm
- Exposure Time5ms
- 600 frames/mn
16Automated DIMM Operation
- The seeing is updated every minute for zenith
observation at 0.5 micron wavelength - The accuracy is better than 10 above 0.2
- The natural atmospheric noise is about 10 of the
seeing
17Automated DIMM Operation
- The system automatically switches to another star
in case of clouds - The seeing is independent of cloudiness (although
sometimes pretty good with high cirrus clouds) - Aperture photometry alows to monitor the sky
variability
18Automated DIMM Operation
- Aperture photometry on ca 5000 DIMM short
exposures allows to monitor the flux variability,
equivalent to the extinction variability (June
2000 statistics below)
The threshold for photometric sky is between 1
and 2 relative flux rms
19DIMM Seeing vs. VLT Image Quality
DIMM converts image motion into large telescope
seeing with the assumption of an infinite outer
scale of the turbulence. UT images turned out
about 10 better than predicted by DIMM,
confirming the finite character of the outer
scale.
- Comparison of DIMM seeing (Y axis), with FORS
Science Verification (SV) Image Quality (X axis)
as processed by the SV team, corrected for zenith
and 500nm.
20Corrected DIMM Seeing vs. VLT Image Quality
DIMM converts image motion into large telescope
seeing with the assumption of an infinite outer
scale of the turbulence. UT images turned out
about 10 better than predicted by DIMM,
confirming the finite character of the outer
scale. Correcting for that effect is possible by
removing from the DIMM the share of the tilt of
an 8m aperture.
- Comparison of DIMM seeing (Y axis) after
correction for outer scale, with FORS Science
Verification (SV) Image Quality (X axis) as
processed by the SV team, corrected for zenith
and 500nm.
21Corrected DIMM Seeing vs. VLT Image Quality
DIMM converts image motion into large telescope
seeing with the assumption of an infinite outer
scale of the turbulence. UT images turned out
about 10 better than predicted by DIMM,
confirming the finite character of the outer
scale. Correcting for that effect is possible by
removing from the DIMM the share of the tilt of
an 8m aperture.
- Comparison of DIMM seeing (Y axis) after
correction for outer scale, with UT1 Science
Verification (SV) Image Quality (X axis) as
processed by the SV team from Test Camera long
exposures, corrected for zenith and at 500nm.
22DIMM Seeing vs. Large Telescope Image Quality
DIMM converts image motion into large telescope
seeing with the assumption of an infinite outer
scale of the turbulence. Assuming that the outer
scale larger than the telescope aperture, a first
order correction is obtained by removing the one
axis image jitter (Gradient tilt) variance from
the long exposure FWHM
- Outer scale correction coefficient to apply to
the DIMM estimates of the image quality of a 8m
telescope limited by the atmosphere, for 0 and 60
degree zenith angle, as a function of the
observing wavelength (the following central
wavelength of the bands U, B, V, R, I, J, H, K,
L, M, N corresponding to 0.36, 0.44, 0.55,
0.64, 0.79, 1.25, 1.65, 2.2, 3.4, 5.0, 10 in
mm).
23Monitoring Turbulence Height with the DIMM
Scintillation through DIMM apertures of 10-12cm
diameter can be related to the isoplanatic angle
(Loos Hogge, Appl. Opt. 18, 15 1979) and then
to the normalized 5/3rd moment of the turbulence
height (Hbar).
- The atmospheric seeing (black lower curve, in
arcsec) is the cumulative effect of several
turbulent layers at various altitudes monitoring
the characteristic altitude of the turbulence
(red upper curve, in km) is necessary for
planning adaptive optics instrumentation. In this
example, the bad seeing is located at low
altitude while good conditions are produced by a
few layers at high altitude.
24Local Seeing Ground Layer Turbulence at Paranal
- Measurement of the microthermal activity and
Seeing at Paranal (GSM Campaign, Nice University)
during a night presenting variable conditions
(F. Martin, R. Conan, A. Tokovinin, A. Ziad, H.
Trinquet, J. Borgnino, A. Agabi and M. Sarazin
Optical parameter relevant for high angular
resolution at Paranal from GSM instrument and
surface layer contribution Astron. Astrophys.
Supplement, v.144, p.39-44 June 2000).
25Local Seeing Seeing Impact of Ground Layer
- Measurement of the microthermal activity and
Seeing at Paranal (GSM Campaign, Nice
University) The contribution of the layer 7-21m
above ground is marginal both during good and bad
seeing conditions .
26Conclusion
Intercalibration of the site monitoring
instruments is recommended