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First Light spectrum obtained with new spectrograph.

  • DaveGrennan
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  • IFAS Astronomer of the Year 2010
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13 years 1 month ago #88593 by DaveGrennan
Thought I'd share this. I recently acquired an L200 spectrograph. For those who don't know this is a littrow spectrograph similar to the shelyak L-Hires instrument. One of the main differences being this provided as a kit for home build, hence it comes in at around 1/4 price. Well I was lucky enough to acquire the very last available kit from the current batch of these. I took lots of photos during the build and will write them up later.

Anyway on to the subject matter. I had a first light with this last evening. Arcturus was well up in the south-east. The following is 5 x 60 seconds and is calibrated with a neon reference lamp. I must have bumped something between taking the sequence and the neon calibration frame as everything is shifted about 7 angstroms to the red. However it still is in very good keeping with published reference spectra for a KIII type star. The domain measured was 5920 - 7000 angstroms (red to infra-red) and resolution is 1.5angstroms/pixel.

www.webtreatz.com/gallery/displayimage.php?pos=-105

Image was taken through C14 at f/10 and ST8 binned 2x2.

I'm looking forward to having lots of fun with this as the resolution R=3000 is plenty good enough to measure stellar radial velocities, classifications, determining spectroscopic binaries and even galactic red shifts.

Will post more as it happens.

Clear skies,

Dave.

Regards and Clear Skies,

Dave.
J41 - Raheny Observatory.
www.webtreatz.com
Equipment List here

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  • DaveGrennan
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13 years 1 month ago #88594 by DaveGrennan
I should add, the bright peak at the left is a hot pixel and not a new emission line:)

Regards and Clear Skies,

Dave.
J41 - Raheny Observatory.
www.webtreatz.com
Equipment List here

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13 years 1 month ago #88595 by mjc
Dave - fantastic stuff.

Spectroscopy is a fascinating.
Whole bunch of new possibilities for you now.
Hopefully, as time rolls on, we might get one or two more taking the plunge in that direction and its good to see that we're going to have some local hands-on experience.

Mark C.

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13 years 1 month ago - 13 years 1 month ago #88597 by johnomahony
Well done Dave. Serious scientific capability there.
What is the wavelength range of the spectrometer? If it goes below 8000A you might be able to get some chemical data also (i.e planets, bright nebulae, comets etc..) although you will be limited by the glass transmission on the corrector plate.

The Lord giveth, the Revenue taketh away. (John 1:16)

www.flickr.com/photos/7703127@N07/
Last edit: 13 years 1 month ago by johnomahony.

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  • DaveGrennan
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13 years 1 month ago #88598 by DaveGrennan
John, The grating is blazed at around 550Nm so it is efficient right from UV to IR. Observing chemical lines in planetary atmospheres is very definitely on the cards.

Regards and Clear Skies,

Dave.
J41 - Raheny Observatory.
www.webtreatz.com
Equipment List here

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13 years 1 month ago #88605 by ayiomamitis
Dave,

VERY nice work and good for you! This is something which has been on my mind for some time and I will certainly be following in your footsteps much sooner than later.

Can you provide a link surrounding the spectrograph?

Congrats once again!

Anthony.

Anthony Ayiomamitis
Athens, Greece
www.perseus.gr

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