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The LASP* at RIT’s Center for Imaging Science. *Laboratory for Astronomy in Strange Places. Telescopes on Mauna Kea. Altitude circa 14,000 ft. The Kuiper Airborne Observatory. Altitudes up to 45,000 ft. Higher is Better: Roots of the LASP.
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The LASP* at RIT’s Center for Imaging Science *Laboratory for Astronomy in Strange Places
Telescopes on Mauna Kea Altitude circa 14,000 ft.
The Kuiper Airborne Observatory Altitudes up to 45,000 ft.
Higher is Better: Roots of the LASP CIS’s Director (as grad student!) in action on the Kuiper Airborne Observatory (1970-something)
Why Do Astronomy in the Infrared? • Most of the luminosity of our galaxy and in other galaxies emerges in this wavelength region • Low dust extinction at these wavelengths permits unbiased and potentially complete observations of statistically large samples of objects • Formation of galaxies in the early universe and the crucial stages of formation and evolution of stars and planets can be best studied in this range of wavelengths • Most of the fundamental absorption and emission lines and bands of astrophysically and astrochemically significant molecules occur in the far infrared
That was then... Kuiper Airborne Observatory maps of far-IR emissionfrom the W3 star formation region, 1970-something
This is now... The W3 star formation region as seen in the near-IR by a modern IR camera
Mosaics obtained at three infrared wavelengths 1.65 microns 1.25 microns 2.2 microns
Big targets need big detector arrays The galactic center region in the near-IR
This image took a long time to make... …because this image of M17 (from late 1980’s) consists of a mosaic of several dozen individual 58x62 frames
But this one was a snap! Image of M17 taken in mid-1990’s with a 256x256 near-infrared detector array
Narrow-band IR imaging:Distinguishing the dust from the gas Dust emission from M17at 3.3microns Emission from ionized gas at 2.16 microns and 4.05 microns
Data Pipelining at RIT • Data from the South Pole • National request for proposals • 45 proposals received; 13 carried out • Data reduced at RIT and distributed worldwide
Star formation regions from the Pole The advantage of infrared imaging from a cold environment
Star formation regions from the Pole The advantage of infrared imaging with a wide field
A very wide field 3-color IR image Image mosaic of the NGC 6334 star formation region obtained with SPIREX/Abu at the South Pole
Site monitoring for the entire season The advantage of relentless observing & data pipelining
How to squeeze blood from a rock(Or, how to make the bad times look like the good)
Telescope specifications • Nominal Operational Wavelength Range: 0.3 to 1600 um • prime wavelengths 15-300 microns • Primary Mirror Diameter = 2.7 meters • System Clear Aperture Diameter = 2.5 meters • Nominal System f-ratio = 19.6 • Primary Mirror f-ratio = 1.28 • Telescope's Unvignetted Elevation Range: 20-60 degrees
SOFIA Key Science • Interstellar cloud physics and star formation in our galaxy • Proto-planetary disks and planet formation in nearby star systems • Origin and evolution of biogenic atoms, molecules, and solids • Composition and structure of planetary atmospheres and rings, and comets • Star formation, dynamics, and chemical content of other galaxies • The dynamic activity in the center of the Milky Way.
SOFIA Data Pipelining at RIT • Under construction: a data cycle system for SOFIA • Our data cycle system will be modular, extensible, and continuously improving • These 3 attributes are the promise of SOFIA
In the works: telescopes on the Atacama Plateau, Chile • Altitude: circa 19000 ft. • Rainfall: almost never Talk about astronomy in strange places…!