Transcript document
The Imaging Chain
in Optical Astronomy
Review and Overview
“Imaging Chain” includes these elements:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
energy source
object
collector
detector (or sensor)
processor
display
analysis
storage (if any)
Optical Imaging Chain
1: source
5: processing
2: object
3: collector
4: sensor
6: display
7: analysis
Source 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
Optical Imaging Chain in Astronomy
5: processing
1: source
2: object
6: display
7: analysis
3: collector
4: sensor
8: storage
Imaging Chain in Radio Astronomy
1,2
3,4
radio waves
receiver where
waves are collected
waves
converted into
electro signals
5
computer
received as signal
6,7
Specific 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
Angular 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)
Sensitivity vs. Dynamic Range
• Sensitivity
– ability to measure faint brightnesses
• Dynamic Range
– ability to image “bright” and “faint” sources in same system
Wavelength 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)
Optical Collector (Link #3)
Optical 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
Optical 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
Optical 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
Thin 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
http://www.cmog.org/page.cfm?page=374
Hale 200" Telescope
Palomar Mountain, CA
http://www.astro.caltech.edu/observatories/palomar/overview.html
200" 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
Keck telescopes, Mauna Kea, HI
http://www2.keck.hawaii.edu/geninfo/about.html
400" 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 (< 15 tons)
• Telescope weighs 270 tons
• “Alt-azimuth” mount (left-right, up-down
motion)
– follows sky with two motions + rotation
Basic Designs of Optical
Reflecting Telescopes
1. Prime focus: light focused by primary mirror alone
2. Newtonian: use flat, diagonal secondary mirror to
deflect light out side of tube
3. Cassegrain: use convex secondary mirror to reflect
light back through hole in primary
4. Nasmyth (or Coudé) focus (coudé French for
“bend” or “elbow”): uses a tertiary mirror to
redirect light to external instruments (e.g., a
spectrograph)
Prime Focus
Sensor
f
Mirror diameter must be large to ensure that
obstruction is not significant
Newtonian Reflector
Sensor
Cassegrain Telescope
Sensor
Secondary
Convex Mirror
Feature of Cassegrain Telescope
• Long Focal Length in
Short Tube
f
Location of
Equivalent Thin Lens
Coudé or Nasmyth Telescope
Sensor
Optical Reflecting Telescopes
Schematic
of 10-meter
Keck
telescope
(segmented
mirror)
Large 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)
Keck
telescope
mirror
(note
person)
http://seds.lpl.arizona.edu/billa/bigeyes.html
Summit of Mauna Kea, with Maui in background
Why Build Large Telescopes?
1. Larger Aperture Gathers MORE Light
–
–
Light-Gathering Power Area
Area of Circular Aperture = D2 / 4 D2
•
D = diameter of primary collecting element
2. Larger aperture better angular resolution
–
recall that:
D
Why Build Small Telescopes?
1. Smaller aperture collects less light
•
less chance of saturation (“overexposure”)
on bright sources
2. Smaller aperture larger field of view
(generally)
–
Determined by “F ratio” or “F#”
f
F#
D
f = focal length of collecting element
D = diameter of aperture
F 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#
F# 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
F Ratio: F#
• Two reflecting telescopes with different F#
and same detector have different “Fields of
View”:
large
Small F#
small
Large F#
Sensors (Link #4)
Astronomical Cameras
Usually Include:
1. Spectral Filters
–
–
most experiments require specific wavelength
range(s)
broad-band or narrow-band
2. “Reimaging” Optics
–
enlarge or reduce image formed by primary collecting
element
3. Light-Sensitive Detector: Sensor
Astronomical Sensors
(visual wavelengths)
• Most common detectors:
– Human Eye
– Photographic Emulsion
• film
• plates
– Electronic Sensors
• CCDs
Angular Resolution
• Fundamental Limit due to Diffraction in
“Optical Collector” (Link #3)
D
• But Also Limited by Resolution of Sensor!
Charge-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
CCD 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
CCD 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 CCD’s silicon, the photon
wavelength must be less than maximum max
1100 nm (near infrared)
Energy
Electrons in “Free” States
(“conduction band”)
Electrons in “Bound” States
(“valance band”)
photon
CCD 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
Sensor 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
Same 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
Photographic techniques:
silver halide
• Film
– Emulsion on “flexible” substrate
– Still used by amateurs using sensitive film
• B&W 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 70’s
Eye 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”
Eye with Telescope
Without Eyepiece
With Eyepiece
Light entering eye
is “collimated”
Eye as Astronomical Detector
• Point sources (stars) appear brighter to eye through
telescope
2
D
• Factor is
2
P
– 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.
Atmospheric 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
Scattering
• “Wavelength Dependent”
– Depends on color of light
– Long wavelengths are scattered “less”
Scattering by Molecules
"Rayleigh Scattering"
1
4
• 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 sun’s
direct rays)
Scattering by Dust
"Mie Scattering"
1
• Dust particles are MUCH larger than
molecules
– e.g., from volcanos, dust storms
• Blue light is scattered by dust “somewhat
more” than red light
Link #5: Image Processing
Link #5: Image Processing
• Formerly: performed in darkroom
– e.g., David Malin’s “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)
…
Example of Unsharp Masking
http://www.hawastsoc.org/messier/fslide53.html
Unprocessed
http://www.seds.org/messier/m/m042.html
After Unsharp Masking
n.b., Increased visibility of fine structure in bright and dark regions
of “cloud” after unsharp masking
Blurring 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
Image 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”
Links #6 and #7
Image Display and Analysis
Image 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
Link #8: Storage
Storage
• 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