Achieving a wide field near infrared camera for the Calar Alto 3.5m telescope

Coryn A.L. Bailer-Jones, Peter Bizenberger, Clemens Storz

The ongoing development of large infrared array detectors has enabled wide field, deep surveys to be undertaken. There are, however, a number of challenges in building an infrared instrument which has both excellent optical quality and high sensitivity over a wide field. We discuss these problems in the context of building a wide field imaging camera for the 3.5m telescope at Calar Alto with the new 2K*2K HgCdTe HAWAII-2 focal plane array. Our final design is a prime focus camera with a 15' field-of-view, called Omega 2000. To achieve excellent optical quality over the whole field, we have had to dispense with the reimaging optics and cold Lyot stop. We show that creative baffling schemes, including the use of undersized baffles, can compensate for the lost K band sensitivity. A moving baffle will be employed in Omega 2000 to allow full transmission in the non-thermal J and H bands.

in "Optical and IR Telescope Instrumentation and Detectors", 2000, M. Iye, A.F.M. Moorwood (eds.), Proceedings of SPIE, 4008, 1305
[PDF version] 361Kb, 12 pages

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Coryn Bailer-Jones, calj at mpia-hd.mpg.de
Last modified: 5 September 2000