Globular cluster NGC 6496 observed with SAM. The image is about 3 arc minutes across. The enlarged sections of the cluster show the image with SOAR adaptive optics (AO) on and off. (Image Credit: NOAO/AURA/NSF)

Astronomers at the Southern Observatory for Astrophysical Research (SOAR) and the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO) have demonstrated the significant difference that sharp stellar images can make in our understanding of the properties of stars. They have observed the globular cluster NGC 6496 using a new instrument dubbed SAM, for SOAR Adaptive Module, which creates an artificial laser guide star. SAM, built by CTIO/NOAO-S, is mounted on the SOAR 4.1-meter telescope.

From the surface of the Earth, stars twinkle as their image wobbles around due to the effects of the Earth’s atmosphere, rather like observing a penny on the bottom of a swimming pool. By removing this wobble, using an adaptive optics system that utilizes a laser guide star, the stellar images are sharpened, and fainter stars appear. The accompanying figure shows this globular cluster and the difference between the image of NGC 6496 with the artificial laser-produced guide star turned on and off. Turning on the artificial guide star allows the effect of the atmosphere to be determined so that the adaptive optical system can sharpen the image.

The resulting stellar images allow astronomers to make more precise measures of the colors of the stars, and for a globular cluster, this translates into a better measurement of distance, age, and what astronomers call metallicity: how much the stars are enriched with elements that are heavier than hydrogen and helium. This, in turn, allows for better understanding of the stellar evolution of the stars in these dense clusters.

There are only about 150 known globular clusters in Milky Way, important because they represent some of the oldest objects in the galaxy. Because NGC 6496 is on the other side of the galactic center, it is seen through a thick layer of dust. The position of this globular cluster has made it difficult to determine its basic properties. For example, previous measurements of its distance do not agree well with each other.

Luciano Fraga, Andrea Kunder, and Andrei Tokovinin (in a paper accepted for publication by the Astronomical Journal [preprint: http://arxiv.org/abs/1304.4880]) used the capabilities of SAM to sharpen star images to peer deep into this crowded cluster, obtaining more accurate results than done previously from the ground. The authors find a distance of 32,600 light-years, an age of 10.5 billion years, and a value for metallicity that is much higher than in most globular clusters. To do this, they measured over 7,000 stars in the cluster. Then they plotted the color and brightness of each star, resulting in a diagram referred to as a color-magnitude diagram. This diagram immediately tells astronomers a great deal about the evolutionary phase of the stars in the cluster.

SAM works in the visible spectral region and can cover a field of 3 arc minutes, about one tenth the diameter of the full Moon. It compensates for the lower atmospheric turbulence by using an artificial guide star created by a powerful ultraviolet laser. While this technique, called adaptive optics, has been used on other telescopes before, SAM covers a wider field of view and shorter wavelengths.

Media Contact:
Dr. Stephen Pompea
National Optical Astronomy Observatory, Tucson, Arizona
+1 520-318-8285
spompea@noao.edu

Science Contacts
Dr. Andrea Kunder
Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, La Serena, Chile
+56 51-205330
akunder@ctio.noao.edu

Dr. Luciano Fraga
Laboratorio Nacional de Astrofisica/MCT, Itajuba, Brazil
+55 35-36298141
lfraga@lna.br

Dr. Andrei Tokovinin
Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, La Serena, Chile
+56 51-205206
atokovinin@ctio.noao.edu

Information about the SAM: http://www.ctio.noao.edu/new/Telescopes/SOAR/Instruments/SAM/

Additional Background on the SOAR Adaptive Module

Many scientific projects are limited not by the number of photons detected from a source such as a star, but rather by confusion from the crowding of star that appear to blend together or overlap. This blending together may be caused by the atmosphere which will blur star images together in regions such as globular clusters where the stars appear close together. It was with this in mind, as well as the desire to create a highly useful and efficient instrument, that the ambitious idea to build SAM was put forth 11 years ago, in 2002, by Dr. Andrei Tokovinin of CTIO. The SOAR Adaptive Optics Module (SAM) was successfully designed, engineered, and commissioned almost entirely by the SOAR and CTIO staff, with a highly cost-effective budget of $4.5 million USD.

This adaptive optics system takes a different approach than other adaptive optics systems such as the Gemini telescope adaptive optics system. Gemini uses a sodium laser to produce guide stars projected at an altitude of about 90 km. The SAM system projects its laser guide stars at an altitude of about 10 km, and thus only corrects for the “ground-layer” of the atmosphere. The SAM system improves the seeing over a relatively large field of view (3 arcminutes) and uses an ultraviolet laser to create the guide star. This system allows observations to be made with this system using visible-light instruments. The SAM system is also very cost-effective and easier to use than a sodium-laser-based adaptive optics system.

CTIO is a division of the National Optical Astronomy Observatory, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy Inc. (AURA) under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation.