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: http://www.adass.org/adass/proceedings/adass00/P3-13/ Дата изменения: Mon Jun 4 20:13:00 2001 Дата индексирования: Tue Oct 2 05:57:07 2012 Кодировка: Поисковые слова: redshift survey | 
 24mag) LMT survey at latitudes near -22
24mag) LMT survey at latitudes near -22 - -29
 - -29 will cover
will cover  90square degrees at high galactic latitude and be
especially useful for gravitational lensing studies, for the
identification of various classes of interesting extragalactic objects
(cf. clusters, supernovae, etc. at high redshift) and for subsequent
follow-up observations with 8m-class telescopes. A short description
of the handling of data products is also presented.
90square degrees at high galactic latitude and be
especially useful for gravitational lensing studies, for the
identification of various classes of interesting extragalactic objects
(cf. clusters, supernovae, etc. at high redshift) and for subsequent
follow-up observations with 8m-class telescopes. A short description
of the handling of data products is also presented.
 of the mirror is related to the gravity
 of the mirror is related to the gravity  and the angular velocity of the turntable
and the angular velocity of the turntable  by means of the relation
 by means of the relation
 . The container and the bearing rest
on a three-point mount that aligns the axis of rotation parallel to the gravitational
field of the Earth (Figure 1). The container must be light and rigid. A thin layer
(0.5mm to 1mm) of mercury is then spread on the container.
. The container and the bearing rest
on a three-point mount that aligns the axis of rotation parallel to the gravitational
field of the Earth (Figure 1). The container must be light and rigid. A thin layer
(0.5mm to 1mm) of mercury is then spread on the container.
Figure 2 shows the entire telescope system. Comparing the LMT to a conventional telescope, we see that they are similar with the exception of the mount. The top parts, consisting in a focusing system and a detector, are identical, but there is some cost saving in the upper end structure since it does not have to be tilted. The largest savings accrue due to the simple tripod mount.
While an LMT can only observe a zenith strip of constant declination,
its observing efficiency compared to that of a classical telescope is
very high (no slew, no field acquisition, no lost readout time).  The
tracking will be done with the Time Delay Integration technique (TDI,
also known as the drift scan technique), and low-resolution
spectroscopy can be carried out with interference filters.  A
semi-classical on-axis glass corrector capable of about
 degree field will be used to remove the TDI
distortion. With a classical corrector, the TDI technique degrades the
images since the technique moves CCD pixels at a constant speed in a
straight line, while fixed-sky elements appear to move at different speeds
along slightly curved trajectories.  This latitude-dependent
deformation is zero at the equator and increases with increasing
latitude.
degree field will be used to remove the TDI
distortion. With a classical corrector, the TDI technique degrades the
images since the technique moves CCD pixels at a constant speed in a
straight line, while fixed-sky elements appear to move at different speeds
along slightly curved trajectories.  This latitude-dependent
deformation is zero at the equator and increases with increasing
latitude.
 ,
,  ). The natural possibility of photometrically
monitoring these at daily intervals with a great accuracy offers a unique 
opportunity to define a sub-sample of interesting lenses with reliable geometrical 
parameters, time delay measurements and/or micro-lensing signatures for further 
astrophysical and cosmological studies.
Such a survey will also provide unique data for studies of the galactic
structure and stellar populations, including the detection of micro-lensed
galactic objects, accurate measurements of stellar proper motions and
trigonometric parallaxes useful for the detection of faint red, white and
brown dwarfs, halo  stars, etc.
The ILMT will be located in the Atacama desert and should be operational in 2002. 
With the ILMT field of view at its geographical latitude, the Earth's rotation
will scan the Galaxy from the Southern Pole to the bulge and
central regions. Very precise photometric and astrometric data for millions
of stars will be obtained in the drift scan mode night after night, permitting
the detection of microlensing events toward the galactic bulge.
). The natural possibility of photometrically
monitoring these at daily intervals with a great accuracy offers a unique 
opportunity to define a sub-sample of interesting lenses with reliable geometrical 
parameters, time delay measurements and/or micro-lensing signatures for further 
astrophysical and cosmological studies.
Such a survey will also provide unique data for studies of the galactic
structure and stellar populations, including the detection of micro-lensed
galactic objects, accurate measurements of stellar proper motions and
trigonometric parallaxes useful for the detection of faint red, white and
brown dwarfs, halo  stars, etc.
The ILMT will be located in the Atacama desert and should be operational in 2002. 
With the ILMT field of view at its geographical latitude, the Earth's rotation
will scan the Galaxy from the Southern Pole to the bulge and
central regions. Very precise photometric and astrometric data for millions
of stars will be obtained in the drift scan mode night after night, permitting
the detection of microlensing events toward the galactic bulge.
 4K CCD data flux relies on C++ software 
running on a WinNT4 platform housing custom electronic PCI cards with real-time
multi-channel acquisition capabilities. This system (a Pentium PC) will be 
located in a booth that will be part of the telescope building. The collected 
data stream will then be sent through a microwave data link to a lower 
altitude remote site where the main processing and analysis will take place. 
This will allow dedicating a whole system for reliable data acquisition, 
temporary storage, archiving, observation scheduling and network transactions, 
thereby enabling data reduction to be performed at the same data rate in a remote 
data processing location. The integration of CCD captors, TDI
mode CCD controller, data acquisition PCI electronic cards, 
WinN4 PCI software drivers and data acquisition application software is currently 
undergoing testing. Completion of quality assurance tests related the whole data 
acquisition chain is expected in early summer 2001.
4K CCD data flux relies on C++ software 
running on a WinNT4 platform housing custom electronic PCI cards with real-time
multi-channel acquisition capabilities. This system (a Pentium PC) will be 
located in a booth that will be part of the telescope building. The collected 
data stream will then be sent through a microwave data link to a lower 
altitude remote site where the main processing and analysis will take place. 
This will allow dedicating a whole system for reliable data acquisition, 
temporary storage, archiving, observation scheduling and network transactions, 
thereby enabling data reduction to be performed at the same data rate in a remote 
data processing location. The integration of CCD captors, TDI
mode CCD controller, data acquisition PCI electronic cards, 
WinN4 PCI software drivers and data acquisition application software is currently 
undergoing testing. Completion of quality assurance tests related the whole data 
acquisition chain is expected in early summer 2001.   
A more detailed description of the ILMT project is available at:
http://vela.astro.ulg.ac.be/lmt/