GeminiFocus December 2012 | Page 7

trometry to at least the 0.9 maslevel in a 3-minute observation and provide a photometric measurement of the stars observed to +/0.1 magnitude at Gemini North. bital dynamics of this pair for the 2015 encounter by NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft. DSSI: The Instrument The DSSI consists of an optics box that contains the field lens, beam splitter, and filters. It simultaneously sends the light to two iXon EMCCD cameras. The filters and beam splitter are changeable, and due to their small size, relatively inexpensive. A PC based software program runs both the instrument and the two cameras. Typically, we observe in the visual through infrared bands, although any optical band is possible, being constrained only by the CCD quantum efficiency profile. We have used our speckle camera in a broad survey of exoplanet candidate host stars employing the WIYN telescope in Arizona and now Gemini North. At WIYN we examined the bright star sample and used Gemini North for a more selective program aimed at the smallest, Earth-like exoplanet candidates orbiting within their habitable zones. Figure 3 shows a summary of our typical observations at the two telescopes. Gemini North provides higher resolution (i.e., closer-in views near the target star) and deeper limiting magnitudes; Gemini’s superior telescope size, optics, and high-altitude location also allows us to observe fainter target stars than at WIYN. While our engi- Speckle data are obtained through very narrow band (~40 nanometers) filters centered on the wavelength of interest. EMCCD readout generally consists of a windowed sub-region, covering 2-3 arcseconds on a side at a plate scale of ~0.01 arcsecond per pixel. DSSI can also perform as- December2012 Figure 3. Summary of the Geminilimiting magnitude at 0.2 arcsecond and the target brightness we can reach with our speckle camera. Filled circles are the results at 692 nm, and open circles are the results at 880 nm. The boxed points are cases where results from two nights were combined. The shaded area marks the region of most points in the same plot for WIYN telescope data. All points are marked at the estimated 5-sigma limit at a separation of 0.2 arcsecond. Doubling the observation time would move points upward by 0.25 magnitude, and if 3-sigma limits are desired, all points would move upward by 0.55 magnitude. Figure 4. The reconstructed image of the Pluto-Charon system with their angular sizes drawn (dotted circles inside “glare”) along with the angular sizes of four known stars. Note that our imaging system on Gemini can also resolve the largest stars. GeminiFocus 7