6. EFFECTIVE SPECTRAL RESOLUTION

In a slitless spectrograph the effective spectral resolution depends on the diameter of the stellar image at the telescope's focus. The image spot's spreading may be due to turbulence, to tracking errors during the exposure, to optical aberrations, etc. We will use the generic term "seeing" for the angular dimension of the star after a long exposure (more precisely, it is the half maximum width of the stellar image) . If FWHM is the half height width in pixels of the image spot, and we consider that the spectrum has been correctly sampled, we can write that the effective spectral separation power computes as :

(16)     

where P is the dispersion expressed in A/mm, r the anamorphic factor, e the pixel dimension in mm and FWHM the half maximum width in pixels of a star at the telescope's focus.

We note that in order to maximize the spectral resolution it is necessary to have an anamorphic factor smaller than 1. This is what justified the choice of order +1 in paragraph 3.

The typical width at half maximum for the image spot at our telescope's focus is in the order of 2.1 pixels. Thus :

dl = (2.1 . 9.10-3 . 80 . 0.797 . 102.7) / 90 = 1.4 A

According to formula (11) we compute the sampling factor in these conditions :

h = dl / P = 1.4 / 0.924 = 1.5

It appears that we are violating Shannon's theorem if a resolution of 1.4 A is reached de facto. In practice, the resolution is somewhat smaller because we did not take into account the aberrations of the dioptric optics used in the spectrograph (collimator and camera optics). All in all, an analysis of the spectra obtained with this spectrograph clearly shows that undersampling is the cause of a slight degradation in performance (a CCD with pixels 6 microns on a side should be used rather than one with 9 microns pixels).

7. SPECTRAL RANGE

The spectral range in Angströms that may be observed in one single image is given by formula :

(17)     

where P is the reciprocal dispersion in A/mm and X the CCD width in mm along the dispersion direction.

With a KAF-0401E (or a KAF-0400) we have X=6.91 mm and since P=102.7 A/mm : L = 710 A

In order to explore the spectral range accessible to a CCD like the KAF-0401E, from 3000 A to 10000 A, it will be necessary to rotate the grating by varying the a angle.
 

8. OPTICAL TRANSMISSION

 The spectrograph's optical transmission is a function of:

t1 = the reflexion factor for the primary mirror  = 0.90
t2 = the reflexion factor for the secondary mirror  = 0.90
t3 = the transmission factor for the collimation lens  = 0.80 (14 optical surfaces with coated optics, reflexion factor of 0.985)
t4 = the transmission factor for the objective = 0.80
t5 = the transmission factor of non coated surfaces (camera and CCD windows) = 0.72
G = grating efficiency = 0.60 (Edmond scientific documentation)

Transmission t is then:

(18)      

The numerical application gives: t = 0.22
 

9. SPECTROGRAPH SENSITIVITY

In the case where a pointlike source (a star) is observed, sensitivity S is defined as the number of electrons per second and per pixel for an incident flux of 1 photon per square centimeter per second and per Angström at the telescope's entrance:

(19)      

We will now compute near the H-alpha line, i.e. around 6500 A.

We have:

t = optical transmission  = 0.22 (see paragraph 8)
sc = telescope's light collecting area = 238 cm2   (D=19 cm, obstruction of 0.4)
RQE = CCD quantum efficiency = 0.55 (CCD KAF-0401E at 6500 A)
sp = Spectral range covered by a pixel (spectrum sampling in A/pixel) = 0.924 A (voir paragraphe 5)

whence S = 26.6 electrons/second/pixel for a flux of 1 photon/cm2/second/angström.
 

10. SIGNAL EXPRESSED IN ELECTRONS

We will compute the number C of electrons generated at a point of the spectrum:

(20)      

In this formula C is the number of electrons integrated in an area of Nd . Ns pixels, where Nd is the number of pixels summed along the dispersion axis and Ns the number of pixels summed along a perpendicular to the dispersion axis.

Also we have :

E = star luminosity above the atmosphere in photons/cm2/s/A.
S = sensitivity as computed in paragraph 9.
Ta = transmission of the atmosphere. We use a generic value for a sea level site, Ta = 0.7, which is equivalent to a loss in magnitude of 0.4 with respect to an observation above the atmosphere.
Tf = transmission of the spectrograph's entrance slit. Here there is no slit so we can write Tf = 1.
e = the fraction of the star's energy integrated in Ns pixels in a direction perpendicular to dispersion. We will consider that binning along the transverse axis makes it possible to gather almost all the available energy, whence e  = 1.
Nd = the number of pixels summed along the dispersion axis. Since we are close to under sampling the spectrum and we would not want to lose in resolution, there is no reason to bin along the dispersion axis, and Nd = 1.

The following table gives the spectral flux produced by a star of magnitude 0 and of spectral type A0V (which are the characteristics for Vega) outside the atmosphere:

 Wavelength (A)                 Flux (photons/cm2/s/A)

     4000                               1620
     4500                               1453
     5000                               1167
     5500                                990
     6000                                833
     6500                                700
     7000                                620
     7500                                536
     8000                                483

At 6500 angström the signal for Vega (magnitude 0) will be around :

C(0) = 700 . 26.6 . 0.7 . 1.0 . 1.0 .1.0 = 13000 electrons per second.

Calculating the signal for a star of magnitude m :

(21)      

The computation for a star of magnitude 7 gives C(7) = 21 electrons per second.
 

11. SIGNAL TO NOISE RATIO

If we want to determine whether our magnitude 7 star will be correctly observed for a given exposure time, we must compute the ratio between the signal and the noise (SNR). It is often said that the signal "pops out" of the noise if SNR > 5. In practice, whenever one wants to measure parameters, such as spectral lines' morphology in the spectra for Be stars, the necessary SNR is higher. We will consider that a spectrum will be usable for SNR > 20 (at the continuum level).

The signal to noise ratio is given by:

(22)      

and:

Ti = the exposure time in seconds.
C = the star's signal in electrons/second after vertical binning (on the axis perpendicular to the dispersion).
B = the sky background signal expressed in electrons per second and per pixel.
D = the thermal signal expressed in electrons per second and per pixel.
Ns = the number of piwels summed along the vertical axis (either pixels summed a posteriori or binned during acquisition).
Nb = the number of pixels binned in the CCD during the exposure along an axis perpendicular to the dispersion.
Nr = the number of images that have been summed up in order to reach exposure time Ti.
s = the camera's reading noise in electrons = 17 electrons for the Audine camera.

In an urban site, where the spectrograph's tests have been conducted, the sky brightness is fairly high. It is equivalent to a magnitude R of 16.6 by arcsec2. The corresponding signal as measured by the spectrograph is 40 electrons/second/pixel.

We assume that the CCD's cooling is efficient enough that the obscurity current is close to null, or D = 0.

The Ns parameter shall have a high enough value in order to integrate most of the stellar signal. If FWHM is the transverse width of the spectrum in pixels (along an axis perpendicular to the dispersion), then Ns should be equal to 3. FWHM in order to integrate 99% of the signal. The transverse spreading of the spectrum is around FWHM=2 pixels, hence Ns=6.

We suppose there is no internal binning in the CCD along the transverse axis during the exposure. Hence Nb=1.

A long exposure is divided into shorter ones in order to eliminate any tracking problem that would result in a loss of spectral resolution since there is no entrance slit. We will compute the S/N for a star of magnitude 7 with a total exposure time of 1260 seconds divided into 7 exposures of 180 seconds each.

We have:

SNR = (21 . 1260) / SQR(21 . 1260 + 6 . (40  + 0) . 1260 + (6 / 1) . 7 . 172) = 45

The spectrum for our 7th magnitude star will hence be usable with an exposure of about 20 minutes, which fulfills the aim of our specification.

It should be noted that most of the noise comes from the sky background. In order to improve the situation one should observe under a darker sky, or use a rough slit (a few millimeters wide). If the sky background is reduced by a factor of 2, the SNR increases to 60.

The CCD's reading noise impact is marginal. In this situation, know as "photon noise regime", the exposure time that is necessary to obtain a given S/N ratio is given by :

(23)      

For instance it can be checked that in order to obtain a SNR of 45 with a magnitude 7 star the exposure time will be:

Ti = (452 . (21 + 7 . (40 + 0)) / 212 = 1200 seconds.

For another discussion about SNR calculation click here.

12. BUILDING AND TUNING THE SPECTROGRAPH

Building the spectrograph we just described took two hours of an evening using wooden planks, nails and two-sided adhesive tape: In the following night the first spectra were taken with the computed maximum performances (see further on)...



The Medium resolution (R=3000) spectrograph built to the dimensions computed on this page. Note the 28.5° angle between the collimation lens'  and the camera lens'  optical axis. Both intersect on the grating's surface. Make sure to set both lenses at infinity: begin with the camera optic and the CCD camera by targeting a remote object. Then focus the telescope so you obtain a focused spectrum on the CCD. The collimation lens is then properly set (the star image comes to its focus).



Settings are not too difficult to achieve; they can easily be done "by eye". Here one can see the telescope's pupil (note the central obstruction) after diffraction by the grating, the eye being located where the camera objective should be.

 
  

The spectrograph has been installed on a 190 mm telescope (flat-field-camera 4.0/760 SCL Lichtenknecker on a Takahashi NJP mount). It is important to get rid of any stray light: a black cloth should do the trick.


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