Paper
21 August 1998 MIRAC2: a mid-infrared array camera for astronomy
William F. Hoffmann, Joseph L. Hora, Giovanni G. Fazio, Lynne K. Deutsch, Aditya Dayal
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
MIRAC2 was built for ground-based astronomy at Steward Observatory, University of Arizona and Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. It utilizes a Rockwell HF-16 128 X 128 arsenic-doped silicon blocked-impurity-band hybrid array with a wavelength range of 2 to 28 micrometers operating in a liquid helium-cooled cryostat at 5K. Reflective optics, and externally actuated detector and pupil slides provide a variety of magnification and focal ratio settings without opening the cryostat. Nominal settings at the NASA IRTF and UKIRT give diffraction-limited imaging with .34 and .27 arcsec/pixel, respectively. The sensitivity on the IRTF at 11.7 micrometers , 10 percent bandwidth filter, chop-nod, source in one beam, 1 sigma, one minute total time is 25 mJ/arcsec surface brightness and 43 mJy point source.
© (1998) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
William F. Hoffmann, Joseph L. Hora, Giovanni G. Fazio, Lynne K. Deutsch, and Aditya Dayal "MIRAC2: a mid-infrared array camera for astronomy", Proc. SPIE 3354, Infrared Astronomical Instrumentation, (21 August 1998); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.317327
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 29 scholarly publications.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Signal processing

Sensors

Digital signal processing

Cameras

Electrons

Field effect transistors

Clocks

RELATED CONTENT

LCOGT Imaging Lab
Proceedings of SPIE (July 22 2008)
CCD cameras for the Italian national telescope Galileo
Proceedings of SPIE (March 25 1996)
MIRAC: a mid-infrared array camera for astronomy
Proceedings of SPIE (October 20 1993)
Long-wavelength infrared camera for the Keck Telescope
Proceedings of SPIE (July 01 1990)

Back to Top