W.M. Keck Observatory
12 January 2000
JUPITER'S MOON IO CAUGHT ERUPTING IN KECK TELESCOPE IMAGE
MAUNA KEA, Hawaii -- The successful installation and operation of a 21-st century
adaptive-optics system at the W.M. Keck Observatory has ushered in a new era
of ultra high-resolution astronomical imaging capability.
Recent observations with the Keck adaptive-optics (AO) system have produced
the highest spatial-resolution images ever obtained from ground or space by
an optical-infrared telescope. Funded by the W.M. Keck Foundation, the $7.4
million AO system was installed on the 10-meter Keck II telescope in February
1999. A clone of the instrument will be installed on the twin Keck I telescope
this year.
While adaptive optics previously have been demonstrated on 4-meter class telescopes,
the Keck AO system is the first to be installed on the new generation of 8-10
meter telescopes -- thus taking advantage of the larger apertures' diffraction
limit.
The Keck AO system senses and adjusts for distortions in starlight introduced
by the Earth's atmosphere. The system splits off the optical portion of the
light to sense the distortion while transmitting the corrected infrared light
to the science instrument. Corrections are sent to a flexible mirror at up to
670 times per second.
The resultant images have an improved resolution more than tenfold -- from about
half an arc-second to tens of milli-arc seconds.
"The Keck AO system has opened up new astronomical frontiers by realizing
the full angular resolution capability of a 10-meter telescope combined with
its light-gathering power," said Keck optics manager Dr. Peter Wizinowich.
"We can now observe objects at a level of detail 10 to 20 times higher
than without an AO system."
Since AO first light, astronomers at Keck have used the system to image Neptune,
Saturn's moon Titan, the asteroid Vesta, Jupiter's volcanic moon Io; explore
binary-star systems previously beyond resolution, the heart of our Milky Way
galaxy, and distant galaxies. The recent images of Io caught an apparent limb
eruption and the surface albedo variations are clearly visible. A series of
images of Vesta have been made into a movie that clearly shows the asteroid's
rotation. (See images at:
http://www2.keck.hawaii.edu:3636/realpublic/ao/aolight.html
)
The first phase of the Keck AO system currently uses natural guide stars to
sense atmospheric distortion. An artificial guide-star system using a sodium-wavelength
laser designed by a team from Lawrence Livermore National Lab will open the
full sky to AO observations when it comes online in the next year. Currently
less than 10 percent of the sky has a guide-star bright enough for AO correction.
The Keck AO system now uses an engineering-grade camera (K-Cam) with a 256x256
indium-antimonide detector for science imaging. The addition of the Near Infrared
Spectrometer (NIRSPEC) and the next-generation Near Infrared Camera (NIRC 2)
this year with their 1024 x 1024 InSb arrays and improved sensitivities will
add powerful new tools to the Keck II repertoire.
The installation of the Keck I AO system later this year will be an important
step toward combining the light of the two Keck telescopes to achieve even higher
resolution.
"We are currently working with JPL (Jet Propulsion Laboratory) to build
an interferometer that will have 10 times the angular resolution of an individual
Keck telescope," said Wizinowich.
The Keck Adaptive Optics Team members included Scott Acton, John Gathright,
Olivier Lai, William Lupton, Chris Shelton, Kevin Tsubota and Peter Wizinowich
at Keck Observatory; and Jong An, Ken Avicola, Herb Friedman, Don Gavel, Erik
Johansson, Bruce Macintosh, Scot Olivier and Claire Max at Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory.
-- 30 --
IMAGE CAPTION:
[ http://www2.keck.hawaii.edu:3636/realpublic/gen_info/news/Ioerupt.html
]
CAPTION: At top, the Galileo satellite image of Io from the proximity of a Jovian
orbit shows clearly the dark spots on the moon, which are clearly identifiable
in the Keck II telescope/Adaptive Optics image of Io at top right. Note the
bright flare on the upper left limb of the moon, an apparent eruption from the
volcanically active moon. The three images at the bottom are the various wavelengths
in the infrared that were combined and computer processed to make the final
image. Wavelengths: J is 1.25 microns, K' is 2.12 microns, H is 1.6 microns.
(Visible wavelengths of light are around a half micron). The resolution of Io
is on the order of 0.040 arc-seconds, the most detailed image ever made of Io
from the Earth. Credit: W.M. Keck Observatory/Adaptive Optics team
The images were captured in late November, 1999.