Code: | AST614 | Acronym: | AST614 |
Keywords | |
---|---|
Classification | Keyword |
OFICIAL | Astronomy |
Active? | Yes |
Responsible unit: | Department of Physics and Astronomy |
Course/CS Responsible: | Doctoral Program in Astronomy |
Acronym | No. of Students | Study Plan | Curricular Years | Credits UCN | Credits ECTS | Contact hours | Total Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PDA | 4 | P.E. do Programa Doutoral em Astronomia | 1 | - | 6 | 30 | 162 |
The main goals of this course are:
- understand the fundamentals of astronomical high-angular resolution
- understand the basic set-up of adaptive-optics systems and their functioning
- learn on ongoing/planned applications of AO: High-contrast imaging for exo-planetary science
- understand the fundamentals of spectroscopic data, its acquirement through a telescope equipped with a spectrograph and detector, and its reduction
- gain know-how on how to reduce and analyse high-resolution spectra
- understand the fundamentals of astronomical high-angular resolution
- understand the basic set-up of adaptive-optics systems and their functioning
- learn on ongoing/planned applications of AO: High-contrast imaging for exo-planetary science
- understand the fundamentals of spectroscopic data, its acquirement through a telescope equipped with a spectrograph and detector, and its reduction
- gain know-how on how to reduce spectra with an ESO pipeline
I. Adaptive Optics in Astronomy
1. Turbulence
- Light propagation, interference, diffraction, refraction, Fresnel and Fraunhofer approximations
- Principles of image formation, transfer functions
- Imaging through turbulence
- Phase conjugation
2. Adaptive-optics
- Basic components: deformable mirror, wave-front sensor, advanced algorithms
- Temporal and spatial correction: bandwidth, stability
- Classical and wide-field adaptive-optics
- Extreme AO for High-contrast imaging
- AO and beyond: interferometry; other applications
3. Wave-front sensing
- Principles and sensitivity
- Main wave-front sensors and their features
4. Modelling and reconstruction
- Kolmogorov and von-Karman models of turbulence and their associated statistical properties
- Forward and inverse modelling
- Wave-front reconstruction and prediction on a Bayesian framework
5. AO science
- Imaging: Photometry, astrometry, PSF reconstruction
- Spectroscopy and spectrographs
- Direct-imaging of exo-planets: AO + coronography + post-processing
- Limitations, challenges; Examples
6. Astronomical programmes (tutored lesson)
- Tutored presentations by attendees on current and soon-to-be astronomical programmes using high-angular resolution
- Questions & Answers
II. High Resolution Spectroscopy
1. The Basics of Astronomical Spectroscopy
- Long slit and Echelle spectrographs
- Multi Object Spectrographs
2. CCD Astronomy
- CCD imaging
- CCD spectroscopy
- S/N calculations for spectroscopy
- Data reduction for CCD Astronomy
3. ESO UVES Pipeline Tutorial
- UVES Instrument
- Data Reduction Recipes
- Data Reduction Cascade
Oral presentations by lecturers, joint work on specific problems, discussion of research articles, presentations by the students and/or resolution of exercices.
designation | Weight (%) |
---|---|
Participação presencial | 25,00 |
Trabalho escrito | 75,00 |
Total: | 100,00 |
The students are required to attend all lectures.
In each module (I and II above), the student will have a grade that is computed as follows:
grade_module = 0.25*Par+0.75*W
where Par (graded from 0 to 20 values) is the participation in classes, and W (graded from 0 to 20 values) is the development of autonomous work plus its presentation in a written report and orally, with respective discussion/answer to questions.
The final grade will be computed averaging the grades obtained in the two modules (ie. each module contributes with a weight of 50%).
There is no option for improving the classification or to repeat the evaluation in this course.