New Focal Reducing Optics for MRO!

At the end of August, 1997, new focal reducing optics have been installed and tested at MRO. The old focal reducing optics were not particulary appropriate for the current camera. They were not designed for a field of view (FOV) as large as the current camera affords. As such, there was a considerable amount of vignetting in the old optics. In addition to the vignetting, it has been known for some time, that the point spread function (PSF) in the old optics was variable as a function of position in the field of view. Stellar images at the edge of the field using the old optics had an elliptical shape with a ratio of major to minor axes of approximately 1.25. This was a serious impediment to doing crowded field photometry over the entire image.

Ed Mannery was kind enough to donate some of his personal time in order to design the new MRO focal reducing optics. The physical mounts for the lenses were built here at UW in the physics machine shop. Figure 1 shows Ed's design of the new focal reducing optics which consists of 5 optical elements. These elements are mounted within the filter slide mechanism. The filters fit between optical elements 1 and 2. The optics were built by Coastal Optical Systems, Inc. All five optical elements were coated by QSP Optical Technology, Inc. with very broad band anti-reflection coatings. These coatings insure that single interface reflection losses are less than 2% between 310 and 1000 nm. The average relection losses are less than 1.5% in this interval.

At the end of August, 1997, these new focal reducing optics were installed and tested at MRO. Figure 2 shows an image of the open cluster NGC129 taken through the old focal reducing optics. The circular truncation of the image field of view was caused by the vignetting of the optics. The two vertical streaks are caused by bad columns on the CCD. The variable PSF in the image is present, but not obvious owing to the stretch used in the image display. The wings of the PSF are more symmetric than its core, but the core usually dominates the total energy enclosed in each stellar profile.

Figure 3 shows an image of the same cluster taken through the new focal reducing optics. The vignetting is completely gone. The stellar images are circular throughout the entire FOV. This image was taken with the pixels binned 2 x 2 on the chip.

Measurements have been made on the new focal image scale. For 1x1 binning we now have 0.605 arcseconds/pixel. This is equivalent to an f-number of 6.71 at the detector. Our full field of view is now 10.32 x 10.32 arcminutes. The MRO manual will soon be updated to reflect these facts.

The optics now allow good crowded field photometry to be done across the entire image of the detector. Bivariate Gaussian fits to stellar profiles across the FOV show that there is no detectable variation in the image PSF as a function of position in the FOV. The following table shows the results of analyzing the stellar profile of 40 stars across the FOV of a random star field in the constellation Cassiopeia. The measured Full Width at Half Max (FWHM) of stellar profiles is given as a function of their distance from the center of the FOV.

Measured Stellar FWHM as a Function of Radius from Image Center
Radius from center (in arcmin)FWHM (in pixels) Number of stars in sample
R < 4.673.60 +- 0.0413
4.67< R < 7.003.58 +- 0.0722
R > 7.03.60 +- 0.265

Measurements of the relative flux of a cluster of stars made at different positions in the FOV have been taken in order to estimate the vignetting that exists with the new optics. These measurements have shown that the vignetting across the entire field of view is is less than 2%. These estimates are somewhat limited by stability in the photometric conditions at the time of the exposures. One measurement indicates that the flux of stars placed near the right hand edge of the detector (ie. within about 60 arcseconds of the eastern edge of the detector) may be as much as 4% below the flux of these same stars measured near the center of the FOV. However, similar measurements at the other three quadrants of the FOV show 1.7% variations in throughput with the higher flux appearing near the edge of the FOV.

Ed Mannery has made a ray-trace analysis of the throughputs expected of the optics based on the absoprtions expected from the glasses and the reflections from the coatings at the glass interfaces. This analysis shows that the throughput near the edge of the detector is expected to be 1.8% HIGHER than the throughput near the center of the FOV. This is perfectly consistent with the stellar measurements reported above for 3 of the 4 quadrants measured. Our conclusion is that it appears that the new optics are working exactly as expected as far as vignetting is concerned. Users should be aware of the existence of a 1.8% systematic throughput variation as a function of the distance from the center of the FOV.

A Word of Thanks

This work was enabled in large part by contributions to the observatory by amateur astronomers from the Seattle area. We wish to express our thanks to their generous efforts to help make MRO an active scientific facility. In particular, we wish to thank Jim Naiden, George Best, Larry Shea, Gerald West, James Pryal, Karl Heinz Bohm, Keith Allred, and John Mitchell. Without their support, this improvment to the telescope would not have been possible.