|
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Issued by: Dr Douglas Pierce-Price, Science Outreach Specialist
Joint Astronomy Centre
Email: outreach@jach.hawaii.edu
Tel: +1 808 969 6524
Fax: +1 808 961 6516
Images, notes, and contact details appear below.
22nd December 2004
World's most powerful infrared camera opens its eyes on the heavens
A new astronomical camera has begun operations on the United Kingdom
Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) in Hawaii. The Wide Field Camera (WFCAM), built at
the UK Astronomy Technology Centre (UK ATC), Edinburgh, is the world's most
powerful infrared survey camera. It will survey large regions of the sky at
infrared wavelengths and is expected to discover both the nearest objects
outside our Solar System and the farthest known objects in the Universe.
WFCAM has the largest field of view of any astronomical infrared camera in
the world. In a single exposure it can image an area of the sky equal to that
of the full moon.
"The ability to see such a large area at once, with state-of-the-art
detectors, makes WFCAM the fastest infrared survey instrument in the world,
bar none." said Dr Andy Adamson, Head of Operations for UKIRT.
WFCAM detects infrared light, or heat radiation, which is the key to
understanding many types of astronomical objects. These include stars in our
own Galaxy and beyond, interstellar clouds, the mysterious "failed stars"
known as brown dwarfs, and quasars at the edge of the observable Universe.
"WFCAM will be used to do surveys of the infrared sky which will detect
objects one hundred times fainter than those in the deepest existing
surveys. This survey programme will take up to seven years to complete and
will provide astronomers with a picture of the infrared sky to unprecedented
depth." said Dr Paul Hirst, WFCAM Instrument Scientist at UKIRT.
As part of its commissioning, led by Dr Hirst and Project Scientist Dr Mark Casali, WFCAM was trained on a region of star
formation in the constellation of Orion, about 1500 light years from
Earth. The full WFCAM image area is 1200 times larger than that covered by
UKIRT's previous infrared camera UFTI, and 3600 times larger than that covered
by the Hubble Space Telescope's infrared camera NICMOS. The astronomers
combined observations with different infrared filters to give a 'colour'
image, showing dramatic clouds of gas and dust in the southern half of the
Orion nebula. The images reveal not only the illuminated edges of clouds and
filaments, but also thousands of young stars that are otherwise hidden from
view at visible light wavelengths by the gas and dust.
"Getting this unique instrument designed, built and tested was a major
technical challenge that has been successfully completed through the dedication and
skills of the multi-disciplined team at the UK ATC. To provide UK astronomers
with this huge improvement in capability is part of the core mission of the UK
ATC and marks the end of 5 years of hard work for the team." said David
Lunney, WFCAM Project Manager at UK ATC.
At the heart of WFCAM are four "detector arrays". These are similar in
concept to the CCD chips in everyday digital cameras, but use a Mercury
Cadmium Telluride crystal to make them sensitive to infrared radiation rather
than visible light. Whilst a typical digital camera may take snapshots
containing a few million pixels, WFCAM will map the infrared sky in vast tiles
that contain over 250 million pixels each. When WFCAM is scanning the sky, it
produces images at a phenomenal rate. In a single night, it will generate over
200 gigabytes of data --- enough to fill over 300 CD-ROM disks.
Although the detector arrays occupy a space not much larger than a Compact
Disc case, the entire WFCAM camera is huge. It is an imposing black cylinder,
5.4 metres (18 feet) long and weighing 1500 kilograms (1.7 tons), which points
towards the sky from the telescope's primary mirror.
"This is a novel and unusual 'forward-cassegrain' optical design with WFCAM
mounted just above the centre of the mirror. WFCAM's critical components are
cooled to temperatures below -200C (-325F) so that their own heat glow doesn't
swamp the tiny amounts of infrared radiation that we're trying to detect."
explained Dr Hirst.
WFCAM's size, weight, and unusual position made even its installation at
UKIRT an engineering challenge. It was built by the UK ATC in Edinburgh, and
shipped to UKIRT in Hawaii. The team of engineers used a custom designed
fork-lift truck to lift WFCAM carefully and very precisely into position over
the telescope mirror.
"Achieving first light with WFCAM is the exciting result of many years of
international collaboration between staff at the Joint Astronomy Centre in
Hawaii and at the UK ATC. These stunning images are a testament to the hard
work of everyone involved and we now look forward to several years of exciting
scientific discoveries." said Professor Gary Davis, Director of the Joint
Astronomy Centre.
Professor Ian Robson, Deputy Director of the UK ATC said "Building an
infrared camera is relatively easy, but building the world's largest at an
affordable price requires a high level of design ingenuity and
professionalism. WFCAM is a tribute to the engineers of the UK ATC and we all
look forward to sharing in the fantastic discoveries that WFCAM and UKIRT will
bring, ranging from understanding the secrets of star formation to figuring
out the formation of the first galaxies in the Universe."
The following astronomical images are early results from WFCAM. For further
details please see the Notes for Editors. Credit: Joint Astronomy Centre. Data
processing by Dr Chris Davis and Dr Watson Varricatt.
Full WFCAM tile of a region in the constellation of Orion. In the brightest
region is a cluster of stars known as the "Trapezium", surrounded by clouds of
glowing interstellar dust and gas. This is an image at a single infrared
wavelength (K-band, 2.2 microns), showing a region 22 light years across.
Central region of the full tile, showing dramatic clouds of gas and dust
illuminated by stars in the southern half of the Orion nebula. This is an
image at three infrared wavelengths (red represents narrow-band emission from
molecular hydrogen gas at 2.12 microns, green represents K-band emission at
2.2 microns, and blue represents J-band emission at 1.25 microns). The region
is 11 light years across.
Zoomed image of part of the central region showing the full detail available from WFCAM. This is an image at three infrared wavelengths (red represents narrow-band emission from molecular hydrogen gas at 2.12 microns, green represents K-band emission at 2.2 microns, and blue represents J-band emission at 1.25 microns). The region is 3.6 light years across.
Composite image showing, from left to right, the full WFCAM tile, the central region, and the zoomed image. The small green square in the bottom left of the full tile image represents the field of view with the previous infrared camera, which is about 1200 times smaller than the full WFCAM field of view.
WFCAM being installed at UKIRT (credit: Tomas Chylek, Joint Astronomy Centre).
Fisheye lens view of WFCAM at UKIRT with the telescope dome open, at sunset
just before the start of a night's observations (credit: Paul Hirst, Joint Astronomy Centre).
UKIRT on Mauna Kea (credit: Nik Szymanek).
Star-trails above UKIRT (credit: Nik Szymanek).
Star-trails above UKIRT (credit: Nik Szymanek).
The Orion images
- The region shown is in the constellation of Orion, about 1500 light years
from Earth.
- One light year is about 10 million million kilometres or 6 million million miles.
- Infrared light wavelengths are typically measured in microns, also called micrometres. One micron is one millionth of a metre, one 10000th of a centimetre, or one 25000th of an inch.
UKIRT
The world's largest telescope dedicated solely to infrared astronomy, the 3.8-metre (12.5-foot) UK Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) is sited near the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii, at an altitude of 4194 metres (13760 feet) above sea level. It is operated by the Joint Astronomy Centre in Hilo, Hawaii, on behalf of the UK Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council (PPARC).
The UK ATC
The UK Astronomy Technology Centre is located at the Royal Observatory, Edinburgh (ROE). It is a scientific site belonging to the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council (PPARC). The mission of the UK ATC is to support the mission and strategic aims of PPARC and to help keep the UK at the forefront of world astronomy by providing a UK focus for the design, production and promotion of state of the art astronomical technology.
PPARC
The Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council (PPARC) is the UK's strategic science investment agency. It funds research, education and public understanding in four broad areas of science - particle physics, astronomy, cosmology and space science.
PPARC is government funded and provides research grants and studentships to scientists in British universities, gives researchers access to world-class facilities and funds the UK membership of international bodies such as the European Organisation for Nuclear Research, CERN, the European Space Agency and the European Southern Observatory. It also contributes money for the UK telescopes overseas on La Palma, Hawaii, Australia and in Chile, the UK Astronomy Technology Centre at the Royal Observatory, Edinburgh and the MERLIN/VLBI National Facility.
Please note: it is best to contact these people by email over the holiday season.
- Dr Paul Hirst, WFCAM Instrument Scientist at UKIRT
Joint Astronomy Centre, Hawaii
Email: p.hirst@jach.hawaii.edu
Tel: +1 808 969 6537
- Dr Andy Adamson, UKIRT Head of Operations
Joint Astronomy Centre, Hawaii
Email: a.adamson@jach.hawaii.edu
Tel: +1 808 969 6511
- David Lunney, WFCAM Project Manager at UK ATC
United Kingdom Astronomy Technology Centre, Edinburgh
Email: dwl@roe.ac.uk
- Dr Douglas Pierce-Price, Science Outreach Specialist
Joint Astronomy Centre
Email: outreach@jach.hawaii.edu
Tel: +1 808 969 6524
Fax: +1 808 961 6516
- Julia Maddock, Community Press Officer
Particle Physics & Astronomy Research Council
Tel: +44 (0)1793 442094
Fax: +44 (0)1793 442002
Email: julia.maddock@pparc.ac.uk
Web links
- Joint Astronomy Centre
- http://www.jach.hawaii.edu/
- Joint Astronomy Centre public outreach site
- http://outreach.jach.hawaii.edu/
- United Kingdom Astronomy Technology Centre
- http://www.roe.ac.uk/atc/
- Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council
- http://www.pparc.ac.uk/
- This press release
- http://outreach.jach.hawaii.edu/pressroom/2004_wfcam/
|