the background for this poster shows a life size drawing of one nircam module. the other side is a...

1
The background for this poster shows a life size drawing of one NIRCam module. The other side is a mirror image. The two modules are mounted back-to-back with their FOVs adjacent on the sky. Near Infrared Camera (NIRCam) for JWST Near Infrared Camera (NIRCam) for JWST Marcia Rieke 1 , Doug Kelly 1 , Scott Horner 2, and the NIRCam Team 1 Steward Observatory, University of Arizona; 2 Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center Filter wheel model with top removed to show the dual wheels and element attach points. Protoype bearings for the NIRCam filter wheels. 0.1 1 10 100 1000 0.5 1.5 2.5 3.5 4.5 m) nJy G round (Keck/VLT) Space (HST orSPITZER ) NIR C am z=5.0 z=10.1 Five-sigma detection limits are shown above. NIRCam’s spatial resolution corresponds to 1 Kpc for these distant objects. The z=10 galaxy has a mass of 4x10 8 M Sun while the mass of the z=5 galaxy is 4x10 9 M Sun . Above assumes 50,000 sec/filter with 2x time on longest wavelength. Deeper surveys should reach ~1nJy and detect the earliest galaxies. C oronagraph Background at4.8 um N ear5 or10 m ag Star 1.E-01 1.E+00 1.E+01 1.E+02 1.E+03 1.E+04 1.E+05 1.E+06 1.E+07 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 Separation (arcsec) Background Intensity (M Jy/sr) JW ST10 Keck10 G em 10 TM T10 JW ST5 Keck5 G em 5 TM T5 Pupil Wheel Collimator Optics Camera Optics NIRCam Pickoff Mirror Telescope Focal Surface Coronagraph Image Masks Coronagraph Wedge JWST Telescope Not to scale NIRCam Optics Field-of-View FPA FPA Coronagraph Image Masks Without Coronagraph Wedge With Coronagraph Wedge Not to scale Filter Wheel Calibration Source F444W F300M F277W F356W F480M F335M F360M F460M F410M F430M LWF 1 LWF2 LWF3 LWF4 LWF5 L W F 6 LW F 7 LWF8 LWF9 LWF10 LW F 1 1 LWF12 F322W2 LWF F250M Imaging pupil F418N Flat field pinholes F323N F466N Corona- graph pupil Corona- graph pupil F470N Outward pinholes LWP 1 LWP2 LWP3 LWP4 LWP5 L W P 6 LWP 7 LWP8 LWP9 LWP10 LW P 1 1 LWP12 Grism 1 Grism 2 F405N LWP SWP F164N Imaging pupil Flat field pinholes DHS 2 Weak lens 2 Corona- graph pupil 1 with wedge Corona- graph pupil 2 with wedge DHS 1 SWP1 SWP2 SWP3 SWP4 SWP5 S W P 6 SWP7 SWP9 SWP10 SWP11 SWP12 F140M Weak lens 1 F162M SWP8 Outward pinholes F070W F200W F090W F150W F115W F210M F212N WFS Filter F150W2 F187N S WF1 SWF2 SWF3 SWF4 S W F5 S W F 6 SW F 7 SWF8 SWF9 SWF10 SW F 1 1 SWF12 Weak lens 3 F182M SWF F225N 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 0.00 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00 12.00 F356W -F444W T eff (K) Models Fit 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 -0.20 0.00 0.20 0.40 0.60 0.80 F460M -F480M T eff (K) Models Fit Temperatures of Planets and Brown Dwarfs Survey filters can measure temperatures with an accuracy of 20K For cold objects which may only be detected in the longest wavelength survey filter, temperatures using two medium filters can be measured to 10K. Should be good for coronagraphy of planets! Log g can be estimated from F466N – F470N with limited accuracy – spectra better! Caveat is that this analysis used models (Burrows et al. 2003) – real objects may be less well behaved Overview Overview : : NIRCam provides diffraction-limited imaging over the 0.6 to 5 m range. Two science examples are shown below. It uses HgCdTe arrays with a total of 40Mpixels to cover 2.2’x4.4’ arc minutes in two wavelengths simultaneously for efficient surveying. These arrays have excellent performance at the projected ~37K operating temperatures expected on JWST. In 10,000 seconds, NIRCam should detect at 10- a 10 nJy source at 2m and a 14 nJy source at 3.6m. A beamsplitter divides the input light at 2.4 m enabling the observation of two wavelengths at once. In addition to its role as a science instrument, NIRCam is also the facility wavefront sensor. The same arrays used for science imaging will take images using weak lenses in the NIRCam pupil wheel to enable focus diverse wavefront sensing. NIRCam’s optics need to be exquisite to avoid imprinting any NIRCam aberrations on the telescope and hence other JWST instruments. The University of Arizona is leading the NIRCam development effort, Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center is responsible for building NIRCam, and Rockwell Scientific Company is providing the detector arrays. Status: Status: NIRCam has already passed its preliminary design review, and has completed critical design reviews (CDR) on most subsystems. The instrument CDR is scheduled for May of this year. Two versions of NIRCam will be built: an engineering test unit which will be used in verifying performance of the telescope and associated wavefront sensing and control procedures, and the flight model. Many of the parts for the engineering test unit such as the Be bench, lenses, and detectors are already in production. Prototypes of the cryogenic mechanisms such as the filter wheels and focus adjust mechanism have been built and tested. Several problems that have cropped up have been solved: 1) Detector arrays delaminated from their molybdenum mounts, and 2) cracks developed at two sites on the Be bench as a result of tapping holes. The detector problem was solved by using a stronger epoxy and improved cleaning procedures. The Be bench problem was solved by switching to carbide taps which stay sharp longer and produce cleaner threads. See also posters 115.10 (NIRCam Optics) and 115.11 (NIRCam Detectors). Development of NIRCam is supported by NASA contract NAS5-02105. NIRCam Filters NIRCam’s filter set supports extragalactic surveys, characterization of extra-solar planets, and studies of star formation regions. The filter set covers the entire 0.6-5m range and will enable a broad variety of projects. Other components in the filter and pupil wheels aid calibration and wavefront sensing. NIRCam EPO The NIRCam Team is using facilities on Mt. Lemmon, near Tucson, to run Astronomy Camps for Girl Scout leaders. Other activities include “Ask an Astronomer” days (colorful white board shown from one of these!). NIRCam Coronagraphy NIRCam implements a simple coronagraph that requires no extra moving parts by using a wedge in the pupil wheel to deflect the beam to masks located at the telescope focus. NIRCam will be very effective in studying planets and brown dwarfs in the 4-5m region as shown below. This plot gives the background as function of distance from a star in a coronagraphic observation and shows that at 4.8m, groundbased telescopes are always limited by thermal background. Coronagraph occulting masks are just above the pickoff mirror. Plot courtesy of C. Beichman and J. Green. Distant Galaxy Survey Optical Bench NIRCam’s optics need a rigid base if they are to achieve the required level of performance. The competing need to minimize mass dictated the choice of Be as the bench material. The top two pictures show a plastic bench being used in a practice run of bonding the two halves of a module bench together. The third picture shows part of the Be engineering test unit bench at AXSYS. Aluminum prototype Focal Plane Assembly for holding four 2Kx2K arrays (one shown in the background).

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Page 1: The background for this poster shows a life size drawing of one NIRCam module. The other side is a mirror image. The two modules are mounted back-to-back

The background for this poster shows a life size drawing of one NIRCam module. The other side is a mirror image. The two modules are mounted back-to-back with their FOVs adjacent on the sky.

Near Infrared Camera (NIRCam) for JWSTNear Infrared Camera (NIRCam) for JWSTMarcia Rieke1, Doug Kelly1, Scott Horner2, and the NIRCam Team

1Steward Observatory, University of Arizona; 2Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center

Filter wheel model with top removed to show the dual wheels and element attach points.

Protoype bearings for the NIRCam filter wheels.

0.1

1

10

100

1000

0.5 1.5 2.5 3.5 4.5

m)

nJy

Ground (Keck/VLT) Space (HST or SPITZER) NIRCam z=5.0 z=10.1

Five-sigma detection limits are shown above. NIRCam’s spatial resolution corresponds to 1 Kpc for these distant objects. The z=10 galaxy has a mass of 4x108MSun while the mass of the z=5 galaxy is 4x109MSun.

Above assumes 50,000 sec/filter with 2x time on longest wavelength. Deeper surveys should reach ~1nJy and detect the earliest galaxies.

Coronagraph Background at 4.8 um Near 5 or 10 mag Star

1.E-01

1.E+00

1.E+01

1.E+02

1.E+03

1.E+04

1.E+05

1.E+06

1.E+07

0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3

Separation (arcsec)

Bac

kgro

und

Inte

nsity

(M

Jy/s

r)

JWST10Keck10Gem10TMT10JWST5Keck5Gem5TMT5

PupilWheel

CollimatorOptics Camera

Optics

NIRCamPickoffMirror

TelescopeFocal

Surface

Coronagraph ImageMasks

Coronagraph Wedge

JWST Telescope

Not to scale

NIRCamOptics

Field-of-View

FPA FPA

Coronagraph Image Masks

Without Coronagraph Wedge With Coronagraph Wedge

Not to scale

FilterWheel

Calibration Source

F444W

F300M

F277W

F356WF480M

F335M

F360M

F460M

F410M

F430M

LWF1

LWF2

LWF3

LWF4

LWF5

LW

F6

LWF7

LWF8

LWF9

LWF10

LWF1

1

LW

F1

2

F322W2

LWF

F250MImaging

pupil

F418N

Flat field pinholes

F323N

F466N

Corona-graph pupil

Corona-graph pupil

F470N

Outward pinholes

LWP

1

LWP2

LWP3

LWP4

LWP

5

LW

P6

LWP

7

LWP8

LWP9

LWP10 LWP

11

LW

P1

2

Grism 1

Grism 2

F405N

LWP

SWP

F164N

Imaging pupil

Flat field pinholes

DHS 2

Weak lens 2

Corona-graph pupil 1 with

wedge

Corona-graph pupil 2 with

wedge

DHS 1

SW

P1

SWP2

SWP3

SWP4

SW

P5

SW

P6

SW

P7

SWP9

SWP10 SW

P11

SW

P12

F140MWeak lens 1

F162M

SWP8

Outward pinholes

F070W

F200W

F090W

F150W

F115W

F210M

F212N

WFSFilter

F150W2

F187N

SW

F1

SWF2

SWF3

SWF4

SW

F5

SW

F6

SW

F7

SWF8

SWF9

SWF10 SW

F11

SW

F1

2

Weak lens 3

F182M

SWF

F225N

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

1000

0.00 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00 12.00

F356W-F444W

Tef

f(K)

Models Fit

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

450

500

-0.20 0.00 0.20 0.40 0.60 0.80

F460M-F480M

Tef

f(K

)

Models Fit

Temperatures of Planets and Brown Dwarfs

• Survey filters can measure temperatures with an accuracy of 20K

• For cold objects which may only be detected in the longest wavelength survey filter, temperatures using two medium filters can be measured to 10K. Should be good for coronagraphy of planets!

• Log g can be estimated from F466N – F470N with limited accuracy – spectra better!

• Caveat is that this analysis used models (Burrows et al. 2003) – real objects may be less well behaved

OverviewOverview: : NIRCam provides diffraction-limited imaging over the 0.6 to 5 m range. Two science examples are shown below. It uses HgCdTe arrays with a total of 40Mpixels to cover 2.2’x4.4’ arc minutes in two wavelengths simultaneously for efficient surveying. These arrays have excellent performance at the projected ~37K operating temperatures expected on JWST. In 10,000 seconds, NIRCam should detect at 10- a 10 nJy source at 2m and a 14 nJy source at 3.6m. A beamsplitter divides the input light at 2.4 m enabling the observation of two wavelengths at once. In addition to its role as a science instrument, NIRCam is also the facility wavefront sensor. The same arrays used for science imaging will take images using weak lenses in the NIRCam pupil wheel to enable focus diverse wavefront sensing. NIRCam’s optics need to be exquisite to avoid imprinting any NIRCam aberrations on the telescope and hence other JWST instruments. The University of Arizona is leading the NIRCam development effort, Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center is responsible for building NIRCam, and Rockwell Scientific Company is providing the detector arrays.

Status: Status: NIRCam has already passed its preliminary design review, and has completed critical design reviews (CDR) on most subsystems. The instrument CDR is scheduled for May of this year. Two versions of NIRCam will be built: an engineering test unit which will be used in verifying performance of the telescope and associated wavefront sensing and control procedures, and the flight model. Many of the parts for the engineering test unit such as the Be bench, lenses, and detectors are already in production. Prototypes of the cryogenic mechanisms such as the filter wheels and focus adjust mechanism have been built and tested. Several problems that have cropped up have been solved: 1) Detector arrays delaminated from their molybdenum mounts, and 2) cracks developed at two sites on the Be bench as a result of tapping holes. The detector problem was solved by using a stronger epoxy and improved cleaning procedures. The Be bench problem was solved by switching to carbide taps which stay sharp longer and produce cleaner threads.

See also posters 115.10 (NIRCam Optics) and 115.11 (NIRCam Detectors). Development of NIRCam is supported by NASA contract NAS5-02105.

NIRCam Filters

NIRCam’s filter set supports extragalactic surveys, characterization of extra-solar planets, and studies of star formation regions. The filter set covers the entire 0.6-5m range and will enable a broad variety of projects. Other components in the filter and pupil wheels aid calibration and wavefront sensing.

NIRCam EPO

The NIRCam Team is using facilities on Mt. Lemmon, near Tucson, to run Astronomy Camps for Girl Scout leaders. Other activities include “Ask an Astronomer” days (colorful white board shown from one of these!).

NIRCam Coronagraphy

NIRCam implements a simple coronagraph that requires no extra moving parts by using a wedge in the pupil wheel to deflect the beam to masks located at the telescope focus. NIRCam will be very effective in studying planets and brown dwarfs in the 4-5m region as shown below. This plot gives the background as function of distance from a star in a coronagraphic observation and shows that at 4.8m, groundbased telescopes are always limited by thermal background.

Coronagraph occulting masks are just above the pickoff mirror.

Plot courtesy of C. Beichman and J. Green.

Distant Galaxy Survey

Optical Bench

NIRCam’s optics need a rigid base if they are to achieve the required level of performance. The competing need to minimize mass dictated the choice of Be as the bench material. The top two pictures show a plastic bench being used in a practice run of bonding the two halves of a module bench together. The third picture shows part of the Be engineering test unit bench at AXSYS.

Aluminum prototype Focal Plane Assembly for holding four 2Kx2K arrays (one shown in the background).