A comparison of next-generation turbulence profiling instruments at Paranal

ABSTRACT A six-night optical turbulence monitoring campaign has been carried at Cerro Paranal observatory in 2023 February and March to facilitate the development and characterization of two novel atmospheric site monitoring instruments – the ring-image next-generation scintillation sensor (RINGSS)...

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Veröffentlicht in:Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 2024-03, Vol.529 (1), p.320-330
Hauptverfasser: Griffiths, R, Bardou, L, Butterley, T, Osborn, J, Wilson, R, Bustos, E, Tokovinin, A, Le Louarn, M, Otarola, A
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container_end_page 330
container_issue 1
container_start_page 320
container_title Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
container_volume 529
creator Griffiths, R
Bardou, L
Butterley, T
Osborn, J
Wilson, R
Bustos, E
Tokovinin, A
Le Louarn, M
Otarola, A
description ABSTRACT A six-night optical turbulence monitoring campaign has been carried at Cerro Paranal observatory in 2023 February and March to facilitate the development and characterization of two novel atmospheric site monitoring instruments – the ring-image next-generation scintillation sensor (RINGSS) and 24-h Shack Hartmann image motion monitor (24hSHIMM) in the context of providing optical turbulence monitoring support for upcoming 20–40 m telescopes. Alongside these two instruments, the well-characterized Stereo-SCIDAR and 2016-MASS-DIMM were operated throughout the campaign to provide data for comparison. All instruments obtain estimates of optical turbulence profiles through statistical analysis of intensity and wavefront angle-of-arrival fluctuations from observations of stars. Contemporaneous measurements of the integrated turbulence parameters are compared and the ratios, bias, unbiased root mean square error, and correlation of results from each instrument assessed. Strong agreement was observed in measurements of seeing, free atmosphere seeing, and coherence time. Less correlation is seen for isoplanatic angle, although the median values agree well. Median turbulence parameters are further compared against long-term monitoring data from Paranal instruments. Profiles from the three small-telescope instruments are compared with the 100-layer profile from the stereo-SCIDAR. It is found that the RINGSS and SHIMM offer improved accuracy in characterization of the vertical optical turbulence profile over the MASS-DIMM. Finally, the first results of continuous optical turbulence monitoring at Paranal are presented which show a strong diurnal variation and predictable trend in the seeing. A value of 2.65 arcsec is found for the median daytime seeing.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/mnras/stae434
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subjects Astronomical instruments
Diurnal variations
Error analysis
Free atmosphere
Median (statistics)
Monitoring
Parameters
Statistical analysis
Telescopes
Turbulence
Wave fronts
title A comparison of next-generation turbulence profiling instruments at Paranal
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