The IRTF is a 3.0 m telescope optimized for infrared observations,
located on the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii. Because it is owned by
NASA observing is available to the entire astronomical community.
At the IRTF I will be using the MIRAC2 camera in collaboration with
William Hoffmann (U. Arizona), Giovanni Fazio (CfA), Joseph Hora
(Inst. for Astronomy), and Lynne Deutsch (U. Mass).
MIRAC2 is a Mid-InfraRed Array Camera which utilizes a Rockwell HF16
128x128 Si:As hybrid BIB array. Reflective optics in the camera
liquid-helium cryostat yield achromatic diffraction-limited imaging at
a nominal scale on IRTF of 0.34 arcsec/pixel with zoom capability
from 0.25 to 0.50 arcsec/pixel. There are two cold filter wheels with
15% bandwidth filters at 2.2 and 4.9 , a 5% bandwidth
filter at 7.8
, 10% bandwidth filters at 8.8, 9.8, 10.3, 11.7,
and 12.5
, 4% bandwidth filters at 17.2 and 17.9
,
9% bandwidth filter at 20.8
, 2% bandwidth filter at 24.5
m , an N-band filter (8.2 - 13.3
), a Q-short filter
(16.85 - 19
), and a CVF with 1.8% resolution from 7.7 to
14.5
. A PC with a Digital Signal Processor (DSP) card
controls the telescope secondary chopper and data acquisition,
storage, processing and display, and initiates telescope nod and
offset motions via ethernet, or RS232. A C program is available for
processing the files stored in MIRAC format, combining the chop and
nod images, applying flat fielding corrections, and producing image
files in FITS format. Typical sensitivities expected at IRTF are
30 mJy/arcsec
at 11.7
and 110 mJy/arcsec
at 20.9
,
all chop-nod, one minute total
total observing time (Hoffmann et al. 1993, Hoffmann et al. 1994).
The IRTF is chosen for this aspect of the observations for three main reasons.