explanation      blue bibcodes open ADS page with paths to full text
Author name code: rimmele
ADS astronomy entries on 2022-09-14
author:"Rimmele, Thomas" 

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Title: Ground-based instrumentation and observational techniques
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas; Kuhn, Jeff; Woeger, Friedrich; Tritschler,
   . Alexandra; Lin, Haosheng; Casini, Roberto; Schad, Thomas; Jaeggli,
   Sarah; de Wijn, Alfred; Fehlmann, Andre; Anan, Tetsu; Schmidt, Dirk
2022cosp...44.2507R    Altcode:
  We'll review the current state-of-the-art for ground-based
  instrumentation and techniques to achieve high-resolution
  observations. We'll use the 4m Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope
  (DKIST), the European Solar Telescope (EST) and other ground-based
  instrumentation as examples to demonstrate instrument designs
  and observing techniques. Using adaptive optics and post-facto
  image processing techniques, the recently completed DKIST provides
  unprecedented resolution and high polarimetric sensitivity that
  enables astronomers to unravel many of the mysteries the Sun presents,
  including the origin of solar magnetism, the mechanisms of coronal
  heating and drivers of flares and coronal mass ejections. Versatile
  ground-based instruments provide highly sensitive measurements of solar
  magnetic fields, that in the case of DKIST, also include measurements
  of the illusive magnetic field of the faint solar corona. Ground-based
  instruments produce large and diverse data sets that require complex
  calibration and data processing to provide science-ready to a broad
  community. We'll briefly touch on ongoing and future instrumentation
  developments, including multi-conjugate adaptive optics.

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Title: Lessons Learned Regarding Software Tools Used During the 1st
    DKIST Operations Commissioning Call for Proposals
Authors: Alexov, Anastasia; Tritschler, Alexandra; Rimmele, Thomas
2022ASPC..532..583A    Altcode: 2022adass..30..583A
  The National Science Foundation's (NSF) Daniel K. Inouye Solar
  Telescope's (DKIST) first Operations Commissioning Call for Proposals
  was released on May 15, 2020, and open through August 14, 2020. We
  will present the software tools used during the proposing phase
  focusing on: Amazon Web Services for the Proposal Tools Web Interface,
  Atlassian's Jira Service Desk for the Help Desk and Confluence for
  the Knowledgebase, as well as Google Forms for surveying Proposers,
  and Slack for quick communication and troubleshooting amongst
  team members. We will discuss what software services and tools
  worked well for our purposed process and where improvements could be
  made. Furthermore, we will present some software-related lessons learned
  based on initial feedback from participants in the Proposal Call.

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Title: The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST)/Visible Broadband
    Imager (VBI)
Authors: Wöger, Friedrich; Rimmele, Thomas; Ferayorni, Andrew; Beard,
   Andrew; Gregory, Brian S.; Sekulic, Predrag; Hegwer, Steven L.
2021SoPh..296..145W    Altcode:
  The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) is a ground-based
  observatory for observations of the solar atmosphere featuring an
  unprecedented entrance aperture of four meters. To address its demanding
  scientific goals, DKIST features innovative and state-of-the-art
  instrument subsystems that are fully integrated with the facility
  and designed to be capable of operating mostly simultaneously. An
  important component of DKIST's first-light instrument suite is the
  Visible Broadband Imager (VBI). The VBI is an imaging instrument that
  aims to acquire images of the solar photosphere and chromosphere with
  high spatial resolution and high temporal cadence to investigate
  the to-date smallest detectable features and their dynamics in the
  solar atmosphere. VBI observations of unprecedented spatial resolution
  ultimately will be able to inform modern numerical models and thereby
  allow new insights into the physics of the plasma motion at the smallest
  scales measurable by DKIST. The VBI was designed to deliver images
  at various wavelengths and at the diffraction limit of DKIST. The
  diffraction limit is achieved by using adaptive optics in conjunction
  with post-facto image-reconstruction techniques to remove residual
  effects of the terrestrial atmosphere. The first images of the VBI
  demonstrate that DKIST's optical system enables diffraction-limited
  imaging across a large field of view of various layers in the solar
  atmosphere. These images allow a first glimpse at the exciting
  scientific discoveries that will be possible with DKIST's VBI.

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Title: Solar Adaptive Optics
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Marino, J.; Schmidt, D.; Wöger, F.
2021hai2.book..345R    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

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Title: The National Science Foundation's Daniel K. Inouye Solar
    Telescope — Status Update
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Woeger, F.; Tritschler, A.; Casini, R.; de Wijn,
   A.; Fehlmann, A.; Harrington, D.; Jaeggli, S.; Anan, T.; Beck, C.;
   Cauzzi, G.; Schad, T.; Criscuoli, S.; Davey, A.; Lin, H.; Kuhn, J.;
   Rast, M.; Goode, P.; Knoelker, M.; Rosner, R.; von der Luehe, O.;
   Mathioudakis, M.; Dkist Team
2021AAS...23810601R    Altcode:
  The National Science Foundation's 4m Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope
  (DKIST) on Haleakala, Maui is now the largest solar telescope in the
  world. DKIST's superb resolution and polarimetric sensitivity will
  enable astronomers to unravel many of the mysteries the Sun presents,
  including the origin of solar magnetism, the mechanisms of coronal
  heating and drivers of flares and coronal mass ejections. Five
  instruments, four of which provide highly sensitive measurements
  of solar magnetic fields, including the illusive magnetic field of
  the faint solar corona. The DKIST instruments will produce large and
  complex data sets, which will be distributed through the NSO/DKIST Data
  Center. DKIST has achieved first engineering solar light in December
  of 2019. Due to COVID the start of the operations commissioning phase
  is delayed and is now expected for fall of 2021. We present a status
  update for the construction effort and progress with the operations
  commissioning phase.

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Title: DKIST First-light Instrumentation
Authors: Woeger, F.; Rimmele, T.; Casini, R.; von der Luehe, O.; Lin,
   H.; Kuhn, J.; Dkist Team
2021AAS...23810602W    Altcode:
  The NSF's Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope's (DKIST) four meter aperture
  and state-of-the-art wavefront correction system and instrumentation
  will facilitate new insights into the complexities of the solar
  atmosphere. We will describe the details and status of the diverse
  first light instruments, including the high order adaptive optics
  system, that are being commissioned: The Visible Spectro-Polarimeter
  (ViSP), the Visible Broadband Imager (VBI), the Visible Tunable Filter
  (VTF), the Diffraction-Limited Spectro-Polarimeter (DL-NIRSP) and the
  Cryogenic Spectro-Polarimeter (Cryo-NIRSP). We will present first data
  demonstrating the telescope's instrument systems performance.

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Title: Adding multi-conjugate adaptive optics to the Daniel K. Inouye
    Solar Telescope
Authors: Schmidt, Dirk; Beard, Andrew; Ferayorni, Andrew; Gregory,
   Scott; Johnson, Luke; Marino, Jose; Rimmele, Lukas; Rimmele, Thomas
2021SPIE11448E..0FS    Altcode:
  The 4-meter Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope will be upgraded with
  multi-conjugate adaptive optics. Two high-altitude deformable mirrors
  shall be added, and a multi-directional wavefront sensor system
  and a real-time control computer cluster will replace the existing
  counterparts of the operational first-light, classical adaptive optics
  system in a few years. Herein we give a brief overview of the system. We
  present the current status of the project including the prototyping
  for the wavefront sensor system and the real-time control system.

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Title: The Daniel K Inouye Solar Telescope and the Multi-Messenger ERA
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas
2021cosp...43E.946R    Altcode:
  The largest solar telescope ever built is in its final phase of
  integration and commissioning on Maui, in Hawaii, and is already
  acquiring images of the solar surface at unprecedented spatial
  resolution. This year marks the start of operations of the US National
  Science Foundation's Daniel K Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST), designed
  to meet the needs of critical high resolution and high sensitivity
  spectral and polarimetric observations of the Sun. As we enter the
  new multi-messenger era for inner heliospheric research marked by
  DKIST, Solar Orbiter, and the Parker Solar Probe, DKIST provides a
  transformative open-access facility with five diverse co-operating
  first-light instruments spanning visible and infrared wavelengths. A
  number of frontier diagnostic windows are enabled by DKIST for the
  study of the heliospheric solar boundary, in particular within the
  chromosphere and corona. We here review and assess the capabilities
  of DKIST, present its current status and available data, and discuss
  how the solar community can best take advantage of DKIST for critical
  coordinated science.

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Title: Preparing for the DKIST operations commissioning phase science
    operations specialists' perspective
Authors: Parraguez, Andres; Alexov, Anastasia; Tritschler, Alexandra;
   Rimmele, Thomas; Diaz Alfaro, Manuel; Gilliam, Doug; Head, Hillary;
   Morris, David; Wright-Garba, Nuria
2020SPIE11449E..2JP    Altcode:
  The National Science Foundation's (NSF) Daniel K. Inouye Solar
  Telescope (DKIST) is located on the island of Maui, Hawai'i. The DKIST
  is a 4-meter clear-aperture solar telescope nearing the end of its
  construction phase in 2021. Following construction there will be a one
  year Operations Commissioning Phase (OCP). The OCP allows for early
  observing opportunities, while at the same time, fine-tuning systems
  and procedures, in preparation for DKIST steadystate operations in
  2022. During the OCP, the DKIST Science Operations Specialists (SOSs,
  a.k.a. Telescope Operators) will execute validated solar observing
  programs as instructed by Resident Scientists while coordinating
  with maintenance and engineering activities. DKIST maintenance
  and engineering tasks are performed by the technical operations
  staff sharing time during daylight with science operations, which
  is an entirely different scenario than for nighttime ground-based
  observatories. Presented here is a summary of the year leading up to
  the OCP from the perspective of the DKIST SOS group. We present the
  training planned for the current SOS group and how this folds into the
  DKIST's still ongoing Integration, Testing and Commissioning phase. We
  are developing an efficient training program to reduce the overall
  training time. We also discuss the tools which assist the current SOS
  group in writing and generating shift schedules, procedures, checklists,
  and workflows.

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Title: First light with adaptive optics: the performance of the
    DKIST high-order adaptive optics
Authors: Johnson, Luke C.; Johansson, Erik; Marino, Jose; Richards,
   Kit; Rimmele, Thomas; Wang, Iris; Wöger, Friedrich
2020SPIE11448E..0TJ    Altcode:
  The National Science Foundation's Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope
  (DKIST) achieved first light in late 2019. The DKIST's design includes
  a wavefront correction system, which incorporates Adaptive Optics (AO)
  in order to feed a diffraction-limited beam to five of its first-light
  science instruments. The first-light DKIST AO is a single-conjugate
  system designed to achieve 0.3 Strehl at 500 nm observing wavelength
  in our expected median seeing of r0 = 7 cm. The system incorporates a
  1600-actuator Deformable Mirror (DM), a fast tip-tilt (FTT) corrector,
  a low-latency hybrid Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) / Central
  Processing Unit (CPU) real-time controller, and a correlating
  Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor with 1457 active subapertures. We
  present results from the first light campaign of the DKIST, focusing
  on AO system performance. We compare the on-sky AO performance to
  the performance predicted through error-budget analysis and discuss
  implications for ongoing operation of DKIST and the upgrade path to
  DKIST multi-conjugate AO.

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Title: The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope - Observatory Overview
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; Warner, Mark; Keil, Stephen L.; Goode,
   Philip R.; Knölker, Michael; Kuhn, Jeffrey R.; Rosner, Robert R.;
   McMullin, Joseph P.; Casini, Roberto; Lin, Haosheng; Wöger, Friedrich;
   von der Lühe, Oskar; Tritschler, Alexandra; Davey, Alisdair; de Wijn,
   Alfred; Elmore, David F.; Fehlmann, André; Harrington, David M.;
   Jaeggli, Sarah A.; Rast, Mark P.; Schad, Thomas A.; Schmidt, Wolfgang;
   Mathioudakis, Mihalis; Mickey, Donald L.; Anan, Tetsu; Beck, Christian;
   Marshall, Heather K.; Jeffers, Paul F.; Oschmann, Jacobus M.; Beard,
   Andrew; Berst, David C.; Cowan, Bruce A.; Craig, Simon C.; Cross,
   Eric; Cummings, Bryan K.; Donnelly, Colleen; de Vanssay, Jean-Benoit;
   Eigenbrot, Arthur D.; Ferayorni, Andrew; Foster, Christopher; Galapon,
   Chriselle Ann; Gedrites, Christopher; Gonzales, Kerry; Goodrich, Bret
   D.; Gregory, Brian S.; Guzman, Stephanie S.; Guzzo, Stephen; Hegwer,
   Steve; Hubbard, Robert P.; Hubbard, John R.; Johansson, Erik M.;
   Johnson, Luke C.; Liang, Chen; Liang, Mary; McQuillen, Isaac; Mayer,
   Christopher; Newman, Karl; Onodera, Brialyn; Phelps, LeEllen; Puentes,
   Myles M.; Richards, Christopher; Rimmele, Lukas M.; Sekulic, Predrag;
   Shimko, Stephan R.; Simison, Brett E.; Smith, Brett; Starman, Erik;
   Sueoka, Stacey R.; Summers, Richard T.; Szabo, Aimee; Szabo, Louis;
   Wampler, Stephen B.; Williams, Timothy R.; White, Charles
2020SoPh..295..172R    Altcode:
  We present an overview of the National Science Foundation's Daniel
  K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST), its instruments, and support
  facilities. The 4 m aperture DKIST provides the highest-resolution
  observations of the Sun ever achieved. The large aperture of
  DKIST combined with state-of-the-art instrumentation provide the
  sensitivity to measure the vector magnetic field in the chromosphere
  and in the faint corona, i.e. for the first time with DKIST we will
  be able to measure and study the most important free-energy source
  in the outer solar atmosphere - the coronal magnetic field. Over its
  operational lifetime DKIST will advance our knowledge of fundamental
  astronomical processes, including highly dynamic solar eruptions
  that are at the source of space-weather events that impact our
  technological society. Design and construction of DKIST took over two
  decades. DKIST implements a fast (f/2), off-axis Gregorian optical
  design. The maximum available field-of-view is 5 arcmin. A complex
  thermal-control system was implemented in order to remove at prime
  focus the majority of the 13 kW collected by the primary mirror and
  to keep optical surfaces and structures at ambient temperature, thus
  avoiding self-induced local seeing. A high-order adaptive-optics
  system with 1600 actuators corrects atmospheric seeing enabling
  diffraction limited imaging and spectroscopy. Five instruments, four
  of which are polarimeters, provide powerful diagnostic capability
  over a broad wavelength range covering the visible, near-infrared,
  and mid-infrared spectrum. New polarization-calibration strategies
  were developed to achieve the stringent polarization accuracy
  requirement of 5×10<SUP>−4</SUP>. Instruments can be combined and
  operated simultaneously in order to obtain a maximum of observational
  information. Observing time on DKIST is allocated through an open,
  merit-based proposal process. DKIST will be operated primarily in
  "service mode" and is expected to on average produce 3 PB of raw
  data per year. A newly developed data center located at the NSO
  Headquarters in Boulder will initially serve fully calibrated data to
  the international users community. Higher-level data products, such as
  physical parameters obtained from inversions of spectro-polarimetric
  data will be added as resources allow.

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Title: An Overview of DKIST Operations Commissioning and Tools
Authors: Alexov, A.; Tritschler, A.; Rimmele, T.; Marshall, H.;
   Parraguez, A.
2020ASPC..527..435A    Altcode: 2020adass..29..435A
  The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) is a 4-meter clear aperture
  solar telescope nearing the end of its construction on the summit
  of Haleakalā on the island of Maui, Hawai'i. It will be the largest
  solar telescope in the world when completed in summer 2020. We present
  a condensed overview of the DKIST Operations Commissioning Phase (OCP)
  which will start after the completion of construction. This Operations
  Commissioning phase will allow for a manageable transition from the
  end of construction into steady-state operations over the course of
  approximately one year. During this phase, science operations will
  specifically integrate, test and streamline its procedures by exercising
  through all steps of the DKIST's Science Operations Lifecycle. We
  will also briefly introduce software tools that are or will be used
  by Science Operations, Technical Operations and the DKIST Data Center.

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Title: Status of the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.
2019AAS...23422601R    Altcode:
  The construction of the 4m Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) on
  Haleakala, Maui is in its final phase. The construction of the facility
  is 90% complete. Operations are scheduled to begin in 2020. DKIST
  was designed to meet the needs of critical high resolution and high
  sensitivity spectral and polarimetric observations of the sun. The
  design allows DKIST to operate as a coronagraph at infrared wavelengths
  where the sky background is low and bright coronal emission lines
  are available. Taking advantage of its large aperture and infrared
  polarimeters DKIST will be capable to routinely measure the currently
  illusive coronal magnetic fields. The state-of-the-art adaptive optics
  system provides diffraction limited imaging and the ability to resolve
  features approximately 20 km on the Sun. Five first light instruments
  will be available at the start of operations. The data from these
  instruments will be distributed to the community via the NSO/DKIST
  data center located in Boulder. We will discuss the project status.

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Title: From Clear to DKIST: advancing solar MCAO from 1.6 to 4 meters
Authors: Schmidt, Dirk; Marino, Jose; Gorceix, Nicolas; Rimmele,
   Thomas; Johnson, Luke; Berkefeld, Thomas; Goode, Philip
2018SPIE10703E..26S    Altcode:
  The MCAO pathfinder Clear on the 1.6-meter Goode Solar Telescope
  has been enabling us to advance solar MCAO from early conceptual
  demonstrations to science grade wide-field image correction. We report
  on recent improvements to the control loop and we comment on issues
  such as the co-aligning of wavefront sensors and deformable mirrors and
  the sensitivity of wavefront sensor gains. Further, we comment on the
  challenges to wavefront sensing and the control system architecture
  faced when scaling up to a 4-meter aperture. Finally, we present an
  early concept of the future MCAO upgrade for the Daniel K. Inouye
  Solar Telescope.

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Title: Construction update of the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope
    project
Authors: Warner, Mark; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Martinez Pillet, Valentin;
   Casini, Roberto; Berukoff, Steve; Craig, Simon C.; Ferayorni, Andrew;
   Goodrich, Bret D.; Hubbard, Robert P.; Harrington, David; Jeffers,
   Paul; Johansson, Erik M.; Kneale, Ruth; Kuhn, Jeff; Liang, Chen; Lin,
   Haosheng; Marshall, Heather; Mathioudakis, Mihalis; McBride, William
   R.; McMullin, Joseph; McVeigh, William; Sekulic, Predrag; Schmidt,
   Wolfgang; Shimko, Steve; Sueoka, Stacey; Summers, Rich; Tritschler,
   Alexandra; Williams, Timothy R.; Wöger, Friedrich
2018SPIE10700E..0VW    Altcode:
  Construction of the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) is
  well underway on the Haleakalā summit on the Hawaiian island of
  Maui. Featuring a 4-m aperture and an off-axis Gregorian configuration,
  the DKIST will be the world's largest solar telescope. It is designed
  to make high-precision measurements of fundamental astrophysical
  processes and produce large amounts of spectropolarimetric and
  imaging data. These data will support research on solar magnetism
  and its influence on solar wind, flares, coronal mass ejections,
  and solar irradiance variability. Because of its large aperture, the
  DKIST will be able to sense the corona's magnetic field—a goal that
  has previously eluded scientists—enabling observations that will
  provide answers about the heating of stellar coronae and the origins
  of space weather and exo-weather. The telescope will cover a broad
  wavelength range (0.35 to 28 microns) and operate as a coronagraph
  at infrared (IR) wavelengths. Achieving the diffraction limit of
  the 4-m aperture, even at visible wavelengths, is paramount to these
  science goals. The DKIST's state-of-the-art adaptive optics systems
  will provide diffraction-limited imaging, resolving features that are
  approximately 20 km in size on the Sun. At the start of operations,
  five instruments will be deployed: a visible broadband imager (VTF),
  a visible spectropolarimeter (ViSP), a visible tunable filter (VTF),
  a diffraction-limited near-IR spectropolarimeter (DLNIRSP), and a
  cryogenic near-IR spectropolarimeter (cryo-NIRSP). At the end of
  2017, the project finished its fifth year of construction and eighth
  year overall. Major milestones included delivery of the commissioning
  blank, the completed primary mirror (M1), and its cell. Commissioning
  and testing of the coudé rotator is complete and the installation
  of the coudé cleanroom is underway; likewise, commissioning of the
  telescope mount assembly (TMA) has also begun. Various other systems and
  equipment are also being installed and tested. Finally, the observatory
  integration, testing, and commissioning (IT&amp;C) activities have
  begun, including the first coating of the M1 commissioning blank and
  its integration within its cell assembly. Science mirror coating and
  initial on-sky activities are both anticipated in 2018.

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Title: Laboratory integration of the DKIST wavefront correction system
Authors: Johnson, Luke C.; Cummings, Keith; Drobilek, Mark; Johansson,
   Erik; Marino, Jose; Rampy, Rachel; Richards, Kit; Rimmele, Thomas;
   Sekulic, Predrag; Wöger, Friedrich
2018SPIE10703E..0FJ    Altcode:
  The Wavefront Correction (WFC) system for the Daniel K. Inouye Solar
  Telescope (DKIST) is in its final stages of laboratory integration. All
  optical, mechanical, and software components have been unit tested and
  installed and aligned in our laboratory testbed in Boulder, CO. We
  will verify all aspects of WFC system performance in the laboratory
  before disassembling and shipping it to Maui for final integration
  with the DKIST in early 2019. The DKIST Adaptive Optics (AO) system
  contains a 1600-actuator deformable mirror, a correlating Shack-
  Hartmann wavefront sensor, a fast tip-tilt mirror, and an FPGA-based
  control system. Running at a nominal rate of 1975 Hz, the AO system
  will deliver diffraction-limited images to five of the DKIST science
  instruments simultaneously. The DKIST AO system is designed to achieve
  the diffraction limit (on-axis Strehl &gt; 0.3) at wavelengths up to
  500 nm in median daytime seeing (r<SUB>0</SUB> = 7 cm). In addition
  to AO for diffraction-limited observing, the DKIST WFC system has a
  low-order wavefront sensor for sensing quasi-static wavefront errors,
  a context viewer for telescope pointing and image quality assessment,
  and an active optics engine. The active optics engine uses inputs from
  the low-order wavefront sensor and the AO system to actively correct
  for telescope misalignment. All routine alignment and calibration
  procedures are automated via motorized stages that can be controlled
  from Python scripts. We present the current state of the WFC system as
  we prepare for final integration with the DKIST, including verification
  test design, system performance metrics, and laboratory test data.

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Title: Wavefront sensing and adaptive optics for solar prominences
Authors: Schmidt, Dirk; Rimmele, Thomas; Gorceix, Nicolas
2018SPIE10703E..5WS    Altcode:
  We explore the feasibility of adaptive optics for observations
  of prominences off the solar limb. We installed a wavefront sensor
  prototype on the GST at the Big Bear Solar Observatory. This sensor is
  used to conduct open and closed loop experiments to characterize the
  limitations of this application following up on first demonstrations
  at the DST. The sensor will enable us to optimize parameters and
  algorithms for a potential future implementation on NSF's Daniel
  K. Inouye Solar Telescope. Unlike the granular structure of the solar
  photosphere that has served wavefront sensors in solar telescopes for
  decades with useful reference structures, prominences are much more
  challenging to use: they are faint and their fine structure is barely
  visible at the short exposures needed for an AO wavefront sensor.

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Title: Status of the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope: unraveling
    the mysteries the Sun.
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; Martinez Pillet, Valentin; Goode, Philip
   R.; Knoelker, Michael; Kuhn, Jeffrey Richard; Rosner, Robert; Casini,
   Roberto; Lin, Haosheng; von der Luehe, Oskar; Woeger, Friedrich;
   Tritschler, Alexandra; Fehlmann, Andre; Jaeggli, Sarah A.; Schmidt,
   Wolfgang; De Wijn, Alfred; Rast, Mark; Harrington, David M.; Sueoka,
   Stacey R.; Beck, Christian; Schad, Thomas A.; Warner, Mark; McMullin,
   Joseph P.; Berukoff, Steven J.; Mathioudakis, Mihalis; DKIST Team
2018AAS...23231601R    Altcode:
  The 4m Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) currently under
  construction on Haleakala, Maui will be the world’s largest solar
  telescope. Designed to meet the needs of critical high resolution and
  high sensitivity spectral and polarimetric observations of the sun,
  this facility will perform key observations of our nearest star that
  matters most to humankind. DKIST’s superb resolution and sensitivity
  will enable astronomers to address many of the fundamental problems
  in solar and stellar astrophysics, including the origin of stellar
  magnetism, the mechanisms of coronal heating and drivers of the
  solar wind, flares, coronal mass ejections and variability in solar
  and stellar output. DKIST will also address basic research aspects of
  Space Weather and help improve predictive capabilities. In combination
  with synoptic observations and theoretical modeling DKIST will unravel
  the many remaining mysteries of the Sun.The construction of DKIST is
  progressing on schedule with 80% of the facility complete. Operations
  are scheduled to begin early 2020. DKIST will replace the NSO
  facilities on Kitt Peak and Sac Peak with a national facility with
  worldwide unique capabilities. The design allows DKIST to operate as
  a coronagraph. Taking advantage of its large aperture and infrared
  polarimeters DKIST will be capable to routinely measure the currently
  illusive coronal magnetic fields. The state-of-the-art adaptive optics
  system provides diffraction limited imaging and the ability to resolve
  features approximately 20 km on the Sun. Achieving this resolution
  is critical for the ability to observe magnetic structures at their
  intrinsic, fundamental scales. Five instruments will be available at
  the start of operations, four of which will provide highly sensitive
  measurements of solar magnetic fields throughout the solar atmosphere
  - from the photosphere to the corona. The data from these instruments
  will be distributed to the world wide community via the NSO/DKIST data
  center located in Boulder. We present examples of science objectives
  and provide an overview of the facility and project status, including
  the ongoing efforts of the community to develop the critical science
  plan for the first 2-3 years of operations.

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Title: Critical Infrared Science with the Daniel K. Inouye Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Schad, Thomas A.; Fehlmann, Andre; Jaeggli, Sarah A.; Kuhn,
   Jeffrey Richard; Lin, Haosheng; Penn, Matthew J.; Rimmele, Thomas R.;
   Woeger, Friedrich
2017SPD....4811703S    Altcode:
  Critical science planning for early operations of the Daniel K. Inouye
  Solar Telescope is underway. With its large aperture, all-reflective
  telescope design, and advanced instrumentation, DKIST provides
  unprecedented access to the important infrared (IR) solar spectrum
  between 1 and 5 microns. Breakthrough IR capabilities in coronal
  polarimetry will sense the coronal magnetic field routinely for the
  first time. The increased Zeeman resolution near the photospheric
  opacity minimum will provide our deepest and most sensitive measurement
  of quiet sun and active region magnetic fields to date. High-sensitivity
  He I triplet polarimetry will dynamically probe the chromospheric
  magnetic field in fibrils, spicules, and filaments, while observations
  of molecular CO transitions will characterize the coolest regions
  of the solar atmosphere. When combined with the longer timescales
  of good atmospheric seeing compared with the visible, DKIST infrared
  diagnostics are expected to be mainstays of solar physics in the DKIST
  era. This paper will summarize the critical science areas addressed
  by DKIST infrared instrumentation and invite the community to further
  contribute to critical infrared science planning.

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Title: Clear widens the field for observations of the Sun with
    multi-conjugate adaptive optics
Authors: Schmidt, Dirk; Gorceix, Nicolas; Goode, Philip R.; Marino,
   Jose; Rimmele, Thomas; Berkefeld, Thomas; Wöger, Friedrich; Zhang,
   Xianyu; Rigaut, François; von der Lühe, Oskar
2017A&A...597L...8S    Altcode:
  The multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO) pathfinder Clear
  on the New Solar Telescope in Big Bear Lake has provided the
  first-ever MCAO-corrected observations of the Sun that show a
  clearly and visibly widened corrected field of view compared to
  quasi-simultaneous observations with classical adaptive optics (CAO)
  correction. Clear simultaneously uses three deformable mirrors, each
  conjugated to a different altitude, to compensate for atmospheric
  turbulence. While the MCAO correction was most effective over an
  angle that is approximately three times wider than the angle that was
  corrected by CAO, the full 53” field of view did benefit from MCAO
  correction. We further demonstrate that ground-layer-only correction
  is attractive for solar observations as a complementary flavor of
  adaptive optics for observational programs that require homogenous
  seeing improvement over a wide field rather than diffraction-limited
  resolution. We show illustrative images of solar granulation and
  of a sunspot obtained on different days in July 2016, and present a
  brief quantitative analysis of the generalized Fried parameters of
  the images. <P />The movies associated to Fig. 1 are available at <A
  href="http://www.aanda.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201629970/olm">http://www.aanda.org</A>

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope: High-resolution observing
    of the dynamic Sun
Authors: Tritschler, A.; Rimmele, T. R.; Berukoff, S.; Casini, R.;
   Kuhn, J. R.; Lin, H.; Rast, M. P.; McMullin, J. P.; Schmidt, W.;
   Wöger, F.; DKIST Team
2016AN....337.1064T    Altcode:
  The 4-m aperture Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) formerly
  known as the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) is currently
  under construction on Haleakalā (Maui, Hawai'i) projected to
  start operations in 2019. At the time of completion, DKIST will be
  the largest ground-based solar telescope providing unprecedented
  resolution and photon collecting power. The DKIST will be equipped
  with a set of first-light facility-class instruments offering unique
  imaging, spectroscopic and spectropolarimetric observing opportunities
  covering the visible to infrared wavelength range. This first-light
  instrumentation suite will include: a Visible Broadband Imager (VBI) for
  high-spatial and -temporal resolution imaging of the solar atmosphere; a
  Visible Spectro-Polarimeter (ViSP) for sensitive and accurate multi-line
  spectropolarimetry; a Fabry-Pérot based Visible Tunable Filter
  (VTF) for high-spatial resolution spectropolarimetry; a fiber-fed
  Diffraction-Limited Near Infra-Red Spectro-Polarimeter (DL-NIRSP)
  for two-dimensional high-spatial resolution spectropolarimetry
  (simultaneous spatial and spectral information); and a Cryogenic Near
  Infra-Red Spectro-Polarimeter (Cryo-NIRSP) for coronal magnetic field
  measurements and on-disk observations of, e.g., the CO lines at 4.7
  μm. We will provide an overview of the DKIST's unique capabilities
  with strong focus on the first-light instrumentation suite, highlight
  some of the additional properties supporting observations of transient
  and dynamic solar phenomena, and touch on some operational strategies
  and the DKIST critical science plan.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Construction status of the Daniel K. Inouye solar telescope
Authors: McMullin, Joseph P.; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Warner, Mark;
   Martinez Pillet, Valentin; Casini, Roberto; Berukoff, Steve; Craig,
   Simon C.; Elmore, David; Ferayorni, Andrew; Goodrich, Bret D.;
   Hubbard, Robert P.; Harrington, David; Hegwer, Steve; Jeffers, Paul;
   Johansson, Erik M.; Kuhn, Jeff; Lin, Haosheng; Marshall, Heather;
   Mathioudakis, Mihalis; McBride, William R.; McVeigh, William; Phelps,
   LeEllen; Schmidt, Wolfgang; Shimko, Steve; Sueoka, Stacey; Tritschler,
   Alexandra; Williams, Timothy R.; Wöger, Friedrich
2016SPIE.9906E..1BM    Altcode:
  We provide an update on the construction status of the Daniel
  K. Inouye Solar Telescope. This 4-m diameter facility is designed to
  enable detection and spatial/temporal resolution of the predicted,
  fundamental astrophysical processes driving solar magnetism at
  their intrinsic scales throughout the solar atmosphere. These data
  will drive key research on solar magnetism and its influence on
  solar winds, flares, coronal mass ejections and solar irradiance
  variability. The facility is developed to support a broad wavelength
  range (0.35 to 28 microns) and will employ state-of-the-art adaptive
  optics systems to provide diffraction limited imaging, resolving
  features approximately 20 km on the Sun. At the start of operations,
  there will be five instruments initially deployed: Visible Broadband
  Imager (VBI; National Solar Observatory), Visible SpectroPolarimeter
  (ViSP; NCAR High Altitude Observatory), Visible Tunable Filter (VTF
  (a Fabry-Perot tunable spectropolarimeter); Kiepenheuer Institute for
  Solarphysics), Diffraction Limited NIR Spectropolarimeter (DL-NIRSP;
  University of Hawaii, Institute for Astronomy) and the Cryogenic NIR
  Spectropolarimeter (Cryo-NIRSP; University of Hawaii, Institute for
  Astronomy). As of mid-2016, the project construction is in its 4th
  year of site construction and 7th year overall. Major milestones in
  the off-site development include the conclusion of the polishing of
  the M1 mirror by University of Arizona, College of Optical Sciences,
  the delivery of the Top End Optical Assembly (L3), the acceptance of
  the Deformable Mirror System (Xinetics); all optical systems have been
  contracted and are either accepted or in fabrication. The Enclosure
  and Telescope Mount Assembly passed through their factory acceptance
  in 2014 and 2015, respectively. The enclosure site construction
  is currently concluding while the Telescope Mount Assembly site
  erection is underway. The facility buildings (Utility and Support
  and Operations) have been completed with ongoing work on the thermal
  systems to support the challenging imaging requirements needed for the
  solar research. Finally, we present the construction phase performance
  (schedule, budget) with projections for the start of early operations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Project management and control of the Daniel K. Inouye Solar
    Telescope
Authors: McMullin, Joseph P.; McVeigh, William; Warner, Mark; Rimmele,
   Thomas R.; Craig, Simon C.; Ferayorni, Andrew; Goodrich, Bret D.;
   Hubbard, Robert P.; Hunter, Rex; Jeffers, Paul; Johansson, Erik;
   Marshall, Heather; McBride, William R.; Phelps, LeEllen; Shimko,
   Steve; Tritschler, Alexandra; Williams, Timothy R.; Wöger, Friedrich
2016SPIE.9911E..0KM    Altcode:
  We provide a brief update on the construction status of the Daniel
  K. Inouye Solar Telescope, a $344M, 10-year construction project to
  design and build the world's largest solar physics observatory. We
  review the science drivers along with the challenges in meeting
  the evolving scientific needs over the course of the construction
  period without jeopardizing the systems engineering and management
  realization. We review the tools, processes and performance measures
  in use in guiding the development as well as the risks and challenges
  as the project transitions through various developmental phases. We
  elaborate on environmental and cultural compliance obligations in
  building in Hawai'i. We discuss the broad "lessons learned". Finally,
  we discuss the project in the context of the evolving management
  oversight within the US (in particular under the NSF).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Progress in multi-conjugate adaptive optics at Big Bear
    Solar Observatory
Authors: Schmidt, Dirk; Gorceix, Nicolas; Marino, Jose; Berkefeld,
   Thomas; Rimmele, Thomas; Zhang, Xianyu; Wöger, Friedrich; Goode, Phil
2016SPIE.9909E..29S    Altcode:
  The multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO) system for solar observations
  at the 1.6-meter clear aperture New Solar Telescope (NST) of the Big
  Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO) in Big Bear Lake, California, enables us
  to study fundamental design questions in solar MCAO experimentally. It
  is the pathfinder for MCAO of the upcoming Daniel K. Inoyue Solar
  Telescope (DKIST). This system is very flexible and offers various
  optical configurations such as different sequencings of deformable
  mirrors (DMs) and wavefront sensors (WFS), which are hard to simulate
  conclusively. We show preliminary results and summarize the design, and
  2016 updates to the MCAO system. The system utilizes three DMs. One of
  which is conjugate to the telescope pupil, and the other two to distinct
  higher altitudes. The pupil DM can be either placed into a pupil image
  up- or downstream of the high-altitude DMs. The high-altitude DMs can
  be separately and quickly conjugated to various altitudes between 2 and
  8 km. Three Shack-Hartmann WFS units are available, one for low-order,
  multi-directional sensing and two high-order on-axis sensing.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A review of solar adaptive optics
Authors: Schmidt, Dirk; Rimmele, Thomas; Marino, Jose; Wöger,
   Friedrich
2016SPIE.9909E..0XS    Altcode:
  Adaptive Optics (AO) that compensates for atmospheric turbulence is
  a standard tool for high angular resolution observations of the Sun
  at most ground-based observatories today. AO systems as deployed at
  major solar telescopes allow for diffraction limited resolution in the
  visible light regime. Anisoplanatism of the turbulent air volume limits
  the effectivity of classical AO to a small region, typically of order 10
  seconds of arc. Scientifically interesting features on the solar surface
  are often larger thus multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO) is being
  developed to enlarge the corrected field of view. Dedicated wavefront
  sensors for observations of solar prominences off the solar limb with
  AO have been deployed. This paper summarizes wavefront sensing concepts
  specific to solar adaptive optics applications, like the correlating
  Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor (SH-WFS), multi-directional sensing with
  wide-field SH-WFSs, and gives a brief overview of recent developments.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Status of the DKIST system for solar adaptive optics
Authors: Johnson, Luke C.; Cummings, Keith; Drobilek, Mark; Johansson,
   Erik; Marino, Jose; Richards, Kit; Rimmele, Thomas; Sekulic, Predrag;
   Wöger, Friedrich
2016SPIE.9909E..0YJ    Altcode:
  When the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) achieves first
  light in 2019, it will deliver the highest spatial resolution images
  of the solar atmosphere ever recorded. Additionally, the DKIST will
  observe the Sun with unprecedented polarimetric sensitivity and
  spectral resolution, spurring a leap forward in our understanding
  of the physical processes occurring on the Sun. The DKIST wavefront
  correction system will provide active alignment control and jitter
  compensation for all six of the DKIST science instruments. Five of
  the instruments will also be fed by a conventional adaptive optics
  (AO) system, which corrects for high frequency jitter and atmospheric
  wavefront disturbances. The AO system is built around an extended-source
  correlating Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor, a Physik Instrumente fast
  tip-tilt mirror (FTTM) and a Xinetics 1600-actuator deformable mirror
  (DM), which are controlled by an FPGA-based real-time system running
  at 1975 Hz. It is designed to achieve on-axis Strehl of 0.3 at 500
  nm in median seeing (r<SUB>0</SUB> = 7 cm) and Strehl of 0.6 at 630
  nm in excellent seeing (r<SUB>0</SUB> = 20 cm). The DKIST wavefront
  correction team has completed the design phase and is well into the
  fabrication phase. The FTTM and DM have both been delivered to the
  DKIST laboratory in Boulder, CO. The real-time controller has been
  completed and is able to read out the camera and deliver commands to
  the DM with a total latency of approximately 750 μs. All optics and
  optomechanics, including many high-precision custom optics, mounts,
  and stages, are completed or nearing the end of the fabrication process
  and will soon undergo rigorous acceptance testing. Before installing the
  wavefront correction system at the telescope, it will be assembled as
  a testbed in the laboratory. In the lab, performance tests beginning
  with component-level testing and continuing to full system testing
  will ensure that the wavefront correction system meets all performance
  requirements. Further work in the lab will focus on fine-tuning our
  alignment and calibration procedures so that installation and alignment
  on the summit will proceed as efficiently as possible.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Progress with multi-conjugate adaptive optics at the Big Bear
    Solar Observatory
Authors: Schmidt, Dirk; Gorceix, Nicolas; Marino, Jose; Zhang, Xianyu;
   Berkefeld, Thomas; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Goode, Philip R.
2016SPD....47.0813S    Altcode:
  The MCAO system at BBSO is the pathfinder system for a future system
  at the 4-meter DKIST. It deploys three DMs, one in the pupil and two in
  higher altitudes. The design allows to move the latter independently to
  adapt to the turbulence profile within about 2-9 km.The optical path has
  been improved in 2015, and has shown satisfying solar images. The MCAO
  loop was able to improve the wavefront error across the field slightly
  compared to classical AO.We will report on the latest improvements,
  on-Sun results and motivate the design of the system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Construction Status and Early Science with the Daniel K. Inouye
    Solar Telescope
Authors: McMullin, Joseph P.; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Warner, Mark;
   Martinez Pillet, Valentin; Craig, Simon; Woeger, Friedrich; Tritschler,
   Alexandra; Berukoff, Steven J.; Casini, Roberto; Goode, Philip R.;
   Knoelker, Michael; Kuhn, Jeffrey Richard; Lin, Haosheng; Mathioudakis,
   Mihalis; Reardon, Kevin P.; Rosner, Robert; Schmidt, Wolfgang
2016SPD....4720101M    Altcode:
  The 4-m Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) is in its seventh
  year of overall development and its fourth year of site construction
  on the summit of Haleakala, Maui. The Site Facilities (Utility
  Building and Support &amp; Operations Building) are in place with
  ongoing construction of the Telescope Mount Assembly within. Off-site
  the fabrication of the component systems is completing with early
  integration testing and verification starting.Once complete this
  facility will provide the highest sensitivity and resolution for study
  of solar magnetism and the drivers of key processes impacting Earth
  (solar wind, flares, coronal mass ejections, and variability in solar
  output). The DKIST will be equipped initially with a battery of first
  light instruments which cover a spectral range from the UV (380 nm)
  to the near IR (5000 nm), and capable of providing both imaging and
  spectro-polarimetric measurements throughout the solar atmosphere
  (photosphere, chromosphere, and corona); these instruments are being
  developed by the National Solar Observatory (Visible Broadband Imager),
  High Altitude Observatory (Visible Spectro-Polarimeter), Kiepenheuer
  Institute (Visible Tunable Filter) and the University of Hawaii
  (Cryogenic Near-Infrared Spectro-Polarimeter and the Diffraction-Limited
  Near-Infrared Spectro-Polarimeter). Further, a United Kingdom consortium
  led by Queen's University Belfast is driving the development of high
  speed cameras essential for capturing the highly dynamic processes
  measured by these instruments. Finally, a state-of-the-art adaptive
  optics system will support diffraction limited imaging capable of
  resolving features approximately 20 km in scale on the Sun.We present
  the overall status of the construction phase along with the current
  challenges as well as a review of the planned science testing and the
  transition into early science operations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope Science Operations
Authors: Tritschler, Alexandra; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Berukoff, Steven
2016SPD....47.0406T    Altcode:
  The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) is a versatile high
  resolution ground-based solar telescope designed to explore the
  dynamic Sun and its magnetism throughout the solar atmosphere from
  the photosphere to the faint corona. The DKIST is currently under
  construction on Haleakala, Maui, Hawai'i, and expected to commence
  with science operations in 2019. In this contribution we provide an
  overview of the high-level science operations concepts from proposal
  preparation and submission to the flexible and dynamic planning and
  execution of observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multi-conjugate Adaptive Optics at Big Bear Solar Observatory
Authors: Schmidt, Dirk; Gorceix, Nicolas; Zhang, Xianyu; Marino,
   Jose; Goode, Phil; Rimmele, Thomas; Goode, Phil
2015aoel.confE..33S    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Next-generation solar data and data services from the Daniel
    K. Inouye Solar Telescope
Authors: Berukoff, S.; Reardon, K.; Rimmele, T.
2015ASPC..495...91B    Altcode: 2015adass..24...91B
  The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST), when completed, will
  be the largest, most capable solar telescope in the world. Currently
  under construction on the summit of Haleakala on Maui, the DKIST will
  enable foundational insights into the physics of the Sun's photosphere,
  chromosphere, and corona. Its suite of first-light instruments will
  produce approximately 25TB of raw and processed data per day, with
  bursts up to 50TB. These data rates will require a scalable, flexible
  data and computing architecture that enables and promotes inquiry and
  discovery. We describe the challenges faced by managing DKIST data
  and provide an overview of the proposed data center architecture
  and resources that will allow users to fully exploit this unique
  world-class facility.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope: Overview and Status
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas; McMullin, Joseph; Warner, Mark; Craig,
   Simon; Woeger, Friedrich; Tritschler, Alexandra; Cassini, Roberto;
   Kuhn, Jeff; Lin, Haosheng; Schmidt, Wolfgang; Berukoff, Steve; Reardon,
   Kevin; Goode, Phil; Knoelker, Michael; Rosner, Robert; Mathioudakis,
   Mihalis; DKIST TEAM
2015IAUGA..2255176R    Altcode:
  The 4m Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) currently under
  construction on Haleakala, Maui will be the world’s largest solar
  telescope. Designed to meet the needs of critical high resolution and
  high sensitivity spectral and polarimetric observations of the sun,
  this facility will perform key observations of our nearest star that
  matters most to humankind. DKIST’s superb resolution and sensitivity
  will enable astronomers to unravel many of the mysteries the Sun
  presents, including the origin of solar magnetism, the mechanisms of
  coronal heating and drivers of the solar wind, flares, coronal mass
  ejections and variability in solar output. The all-reflecting, off-axis
  design allows the facility to observe over a broad wavelength range and
  enables DKIST to operate as a coronagraph. In addition, the photon flux
  provided by its large aperture will be capable of routine and precise
  measurements of the currently elusive coronal magnetic fields. The
  state-of-the-art adaptive optics system provides diffraction limited
  imaging and the ability to resolve features approximately 20 km on
  the Sun. Five first light instruments, representing a broad community
  effort, will be available at the start of operations: Visible Broadband
  Imager (National Solar Observatory), Visible Spectro-Polarimeter (High
  Altitude Observatory), Visible Tunable Filter (Kiepenheuer Institute,
  Germany), Diffraction Limited NIR Spectro-Polarimeter (University
  of Hawaii) and the Cryogenic NIR Spectro-Polarimeter (University of
  Hawaii). High speed cameras for capturing highly dynamic processes
  in the solar atmosphere are being developed by a UK consortium. Site
  construction on Haleakala began in December 2012 and is progressing
  on schedule. Operations are scheduled to begin in 2019. We provide an
  overview of the facility, discuss the construction status, and present
  progress with DKIST operations planning.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Performance Testing of an Off-Limb Solar Adaptive Optics System
Authors: Taylor, G. E.; Schmidt, D.; Marino, J.; Rimmele, T. R.;
   McAteer, R. T. J.
2015SoPh..290.1871T    Altcode: 2015arXiv150801826T; 2015SoPh..tmp...54T
  Long-exposure spectro-polarimetry in the near-infrared is a preferred
  method to measure the magnetic field and other physical properties of
  solar prominences. In the past, it has been very difficult to observe
  prominences in this way with sufficient spatial resolution to fully
  understand their dynamical properties. Solar prominences contain
  highly transient structures, visible only at small spatial scales;
  hence they must be observed at sub-arcsecond resolution, with a high
  temporal cadence. An adaptive optics (AO) system capable of directly
  locking on to prominence structure away from the solar limb has the
  potential to allow for diffraction-limited spectro-polarimetry of solar
  prominences. We show the performance of the off-limb AO system and its
  expected performance at the desired science wavelength Ca II 8542 Å.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: DKIST: Observing the Sun at High Resolution
Authors: Tritschler, A.; Rimmele, T. R.; Berukoff, S.; Casini, R.;
   Craig, S. C.; Elmore, D. F.; Hubbard, R. P.; Kuhn, J. R.; Lin, H.;
   McMullin, J. P.; Reardon, K. P.; Schmidt, W.; Warner, M.; Woger, F.
2015csss...18..933T    Altcode:
  The 4-m aperture Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) formerly
  known as the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) and currently
  under construction on Haleakalā (Maui, Hawai'i) will be the largest
  solar ground-based telescope and leading resource for studying the
  dynamic Sun and its phenomena at high spatial, spectral and temporal
  resolution. Accurate and sensitive polarimetric observations at
  high-spatial resolution throughout the solar atmosphere including the
  corona is a high priority and a major science driver. As such the DKIST
  will offer a combination of state-of-the-art instruments with imaging
  and/or spectropolarimetric capabilities covering a broad wavelength
  range. This first-light instrumentation suite will include: a Visible
  Broadband Imager (VBI) for high-spatial and -temporal resolution
  imaging of the solar atmosphere; a Visible Spectro-Polarimeter (ViSP)
  for sensitive and accurate multi-line spectropolarimetry; a double
  Fabry-Pérot based Visible Tunable Filter (VTF) for high-spatial
  resolution spectropolarimetry; a fiber-fed 2D Diffraction-Limited Near
  Infra-Red Spectro-Polarimeter (DL-NIRSP); and a Cryogenic Near Infra-Red
  Spectro-Polarimeter (Cryo-NIRSP) for coronal magnetic field measurements
  and on-disk observations of e.g. the CO lines at 4.7 microns. We
  will provide a brief overview of the DKIST's unique capabilities to
  perform spectroscopic and spectropolarimetric measurements of the solar
  atmosphere using its first-light instrumentation suite, the status of
  the construction project, and how facility and data access is provided
  to the US and international community.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The DKIST Operations Lifecycle: From Proposal Preparation
    to Completion
Authors: Tritschler, A.; Berukoff, S. J.; Rimmele, T. R.
2014AGUFMSH41C4161T    Altcode:
  The 4-m aperture Daniel Ken Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST), formerly
  known as the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST), will be the
  largest ground-based solar telescope when construction is completed
  in 2019. Community access to the facility and its high-resolution
  optical and infrared instrumentation suite will be provided through a
  proposal merit and approval process, optimizing DKIST for high-impact
  scientific use and emphasizing a high operational efficiency of the
  facility. In this presentation we provide a high-level overview of,
  and guide through, the planned phases of the operations lifecycle
  relevant to anyone wishing to make use of this facility. The lifecycle
  is initiated by the preparation and submission of scientific proposals
  by Principal Investigators, and concluded by the successful execution of
  all observations relevant to an approved proposal, as well as storage
  and management of acquired data and metadata.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Next-generation Solar Data and Data Services from the Daniel
    K. Inouye Solar Telescope
Authors: Berukoff, S. J.; Reardon, K.; Rimmele, T.
2014AGUFMSH41C4162B    Altcode:
  The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST), when completed in
  2019, will be the largest, most capable, solar telescope in the
  world. Currently under construction on the summit of Haleakalā on Maui,
  the DKIST will enable foundational insights into the physics of the
  Sun's photosphere, chromosphere, and corona. Its suite of first-light
  instruments will produce approximately 25 TB of raw data per day,
  with occasional bursts of 50TB per day. These high data rates will
  require a scalable, flexible data and computing architecture that
  enables and promotes scientific inquiry and discovery. We briefly
  describe the DKIST data stream and then provide an overview of the
  proposed data-center architecture and resources that will allow users
  to fully exploit this world-class facility.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope: A Project Update.
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Berger, T.; McMullin, J.; Warner, M.; Casinsi,
   R.; Kuhn, J.; Lin, H.; Woeger, F.; Schmidt, W.; Tritschler, A.;
   Inouye, Daniel K.; Solar Telescope Team
2014amos.confE..43R    Altcode:
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope will be the largest solar
  facility ever built. Designed and developed to meet the needs of
  critical high resolution and high sensitivity spectral and polarimetric
  observations of the sun, this facility will support key experiments
  for the study of solar magnetism and its influence on the solar wind,
  flares, coronal mass ejections and solar irradiance variability. The
  4-meter diameter facility will operate over a broad wavelength range
  (0.35 to 28 microns), using state-of-the-art adaptive optics systems to
  provide diffraction limited imaging and the ability to resolve features
  approximately 20 km on the Sun. Five first light instruments will be
  available at the start of operations. Key subsystems have been designed
  and fabrication is well underway, including the site construction,
  which began in December 2012. We provide an update on the development
  of the facilities both on site at the Haleakala Observatories in Maui
  and the development of components around the world. We present the
  overall construction and integration schedule leading to the start of
  operations in mid-2019 and touch on operations aspects.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: AO-308: the high-order adaptive optics system at Big Bear
    Solar Observatory
Authors: Shumko, Sergey; Gorceix, Nicolas; Choi, Seonghwan; Kellerer,
   Aglaé; Cao, Wenda; Goode, Philip R.; Abramenko, Volodymyr; Richards,
   Kit; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Marino, Jose
2014SPIE.9148E..35S    Altcode:
  In this paper we present Big Bear Solar Observatory's (BBSO) newest
  adaptive optics system - AO-308. AO-308 is a result of collaboration
  between BBSO and National Solar Observatory (NSO). AO-308 uses a 357
  actuators deformable mirror (DM) from Xinetics and its wave front sensor
  (WFS) has 308 sub-apertures. The WFS uses a Phantom V7.3 camera which
  runs at 2000 Hz with the region of interest of 416×400 pixels. AO-308
  utilizes digital signal processors (DSPs) for image processing. AO-308
  has been successfully used during the 2013 observing season. The system
  can correct up to 310 modes providing diffraction limited images at
  all wavelengths of interest.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar adaptive optics with the DKIST: status report
Authors: Johnson, Luke C.; Cummings, Keith; Drobilek, Mark; Gregory,
   Scott; Hegwer, Steve; Johansson, Erik; Marino, Jose; Richards, Kit;
   Rimmele, Thomas; Sekulic, Predrag; Wöger, Friedrich
2014SPIE.9148E..1SJ    Altcode:
  The DKIST wavefront correction system will be an integral part
  of the telescope, providing active alignment control, wavefront
  correction, and jitter compensation to all DKIST instruments. The
  wavefront correction system will operate in four observing modes,
  diffraction-limited, seeing-limited on-disk, seeing-limited coronal,
  and limb occulting with image stabilization. Wavefront correction for
  DKIST includes two major components: active optics to correct low-order
  wavefront and alignment errors, and adaptive optics to correct wavefront
  errors and high-frequency jitter caused by atmospheric turbulence. The
  adaptive optics system is built around a fast tip-tilt mirror and a
  1600 actuator deformable mirror, both of which are controlled by an
  FPGA-based real-time system running at 2 kHz. It is designed to achieve
  on-axis Strehl of 0.3 at 500 nm in median seeing (r<SUB>0</SUB> = 7
  cm) and Strehl of 0.6 at 630 nm in excellent seeing (r<SUB>0</SUB> =
  20 cm). We present the current status of the DKIST high-order adaptive
  optics, focusing on system design, hardware procurements, and error
  budget management.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Construction status of the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope
Authors: McMullin, Joseph P.; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Martínez Pillet,
   Valentin; Berger, Thomas E.; Casini, Roberto; Craig, Simon C.; Elmore,
   David F.; Goodrich, Bret D.; Hegwer, Steve L.; Hubbard, Robert P.;
   Johansson, Erik M.; Kuhn, Jeffrey R.; Lin, Haosheng; McVeigh, William;
   Schmidt, Wolfgang; Shimko, Steve; Tritschler, Alexandra; Warner,
   Mark; Wöger, Friedrich
2014SPIE.9145E..25M    Altcode:
  The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST, renamed in December 2013
  from the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope) will be the largest
  solar facility built when it begins operations in 2019. Designed
  and developed to meet the needs of critical high resolution and high
  sensitivity spectral and polarimetric observations of the Sun, the
  observatory will enable key research for the study of solar magnetism
  and its influence on the solar wind, flares, coronal mass ejections
  and solar irradiance variations. The 4-meter class facility will
  operate over a broad wavelength range (0.38 to 28 microns, initially
  0.38 to 5 microns), using a state-of-the-art adaptive optics system to
  provide diffraction-limited imaging and the ability to resolve features
  approximately 25 km on the Sun. Five first-light instruments will be
  available at the start of operations: Visible Broadband Imager (VBI;
  National Solar Observatory), Visible SpectroPolarimeter (ViSP; NCAR High
  Altitude Observatory), Visible Tunable Filter (VTF; Kiepenheuer Institut
  für Sonnenphysik), Diffraction Limited Near InfraRed SpectroPolarimeter
  (DL-NIRSP; University of Hawai'i, Institute for Astronomy) and the
  Cryogenic Near InfraRed SpectroPolarimeter (Cryo-NIRSP; University of
  Hawai'i, Institute for Astronomy). As of mid-2014, the key subsystems
  have been designed and fabrication is well underway, including the
  site construction, which began in December 2012. We provide an update
  on the development of the facilities both on site at the Haleakalā
  Observatories on Maui and the development of components around the
  world. We present the overall construction and integration schedule
  leading to the handover to operations in mid 2019. In addition, we
  outline the evolving challenges being met by the project, spanning the
  full spectrum of issues covering technical, fiscal, and geographical,
  that are specific to this project, though with clear counterparts to
  other large astronomical construction projects.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Optical design of the Big Bear Solar Observatory's
    multi-conjugate adaptive optics system
Authors: Zhang, Xianyu; Gorceix, Nicolas; Schmidt, Dirk; Goode,
   Philip R.; Cao, Wenda; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Coulter, Roy
2014SPIE.9148E..50Z    Altcode:
  A multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO) system is being built for the
  world's largest aperture 1.6m solar telescope, New Solar Telescope,
  at the Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO). The BBSO MCAO system employs
  three deformable mirrors to enlarge the corrected field of view. In
  order to characterize the MCAO performance with different optical
  configurations and DM conjugated altitudes, the BBSO MCAO setup also
  needs to be flexible. In this paper, we present the optical design of
  the BBSO MCAO system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The multi-conjugate adaptive optics system of the New Solar
    Telescope at Big Bear Solar Observatory
Authors: Schmidt, Dirk; Gorceix, Nicolas; Zhang, Xianyu; Marino,
   Jose; Coulter, Roy; Shumko, Sergey; Goode, Phil; Rimmele, Thomas;
   Berkefeld, Thomas
2014SPIE.9148E..2US    Altcode:
  We report on the multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO) system of
  the New Solar Telescope (NST) at Big Bear Solar Observatory which
  has been integrated in October 2013 and is now available for MCAO
  experiments. The NST MCAO system features three deformable mirrors (DM),
  and it is purposely flexible in order to offer a valuable facility for
  development of solar MCAO. Two of the deformable mirrors are dedicated
  to compensation of field dependent aberrations due to high-altitude
  turbulence, whereas the other deformable mirror compensates field
  independent aberrations in a pupil image. The opto-mechanical design
  allows for changing the conjugate plane of the two high-altitude DMs
  independently between two and nine kilometers. The pupil plane DM can
  be placed either in a pupil image upstream of the high-altitude DMs or
  downstream. This capability allows for performing experimental studies
  on the impact of the geometrical order of the deformable mirrors and
  the conjugate position. The control system is flexible, too, which
  allows for real-world analysis of various control approaches. This
  paper gives an overview of the NST MCAO system and reveals the first
  MCAO corrected image taken at Big Bear Solar Observatory.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope first light instruments
    and critical science plan
Authors: Elmore, David F.; Rimmele, Thomas; Casini, Roberto; Hegwer,
   Steve; Kuhn, Jeff; Lin, Haosheng; McMullin, Joseph P.; Reardon, Kevin;
   Schmidt, Wolfgang; Tritschler, Alexandra; Wöger, Friedrich
2014SPIE.9147E..07E    Altcode:
  The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope is a 4-meter-class all-reflecting
  telescope under construction on Haleakalā mountain on the island of
  Maui, Hawai'i. When fully operational in 2019 it will be the world's
  largest solar telescope with wavelength coverage of 380 nm to 28 microns
  and advanced Adaptive Optics enabling the highest spatial resolution
  measurements of the solar atmosphere yet achieved. We review the
  first-generation DKIST instrument designs, select critical science
  program topics, and the operations and data handling and processing
  strategies to accomplish them.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Challenges for the DKIST Data Center
Authors: Reardon, Kevin P.; Rimmele, Thomas R.
2014AAS...22421843R    Altcode:
  Processing the large volumes of complex, multi-instrument, ground-based
  data generated at the DKIST will require implementation of algorithms
  and tools at a level not previously achieved for high-resolution,
  ground-based solar telescopes. We discuss some the goals of the
  data reduction pipelines for DKIST, including the different types
  of calibrations that would (optimally) be applied to the acquired
  data. We highlight some of the particular challenges for ground-based
  data, including seeing effects, atmospheric dispersion, and rapid
  changes in instrumental calibrations. We will describe a possible
  software framework for the implementation of the pipelines, as well
  as point out some areas for community input or VSO integration in the
  development process.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Prominence Science with ATST Instrumentation
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas; Berger, Thomas; Casini, Roberto; Elmore,
   David; Kuhn, Jeff; Lin, Haosheng; Schmidt, Wolfgang; Wöger, Friedrich
2014IAUS..300..362R    Altcode:
  The 4m Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) is under construction
  on Maui, HI. With its unprecedented resolution and photon collecting
  power ATST will be an ideal tool for studying prominences and filaments
  and their role in producing Coronal Mass Ejections that drive Space
  Weather. The ATST facility will provide a set of first light instruments
  that enable imaging and spectroscopy of the dynamic filament and
  prominence structure at 8 times the resolution of Hinode. Polarimeters
  allow high precision chromospheric and coronal magnetometry at visible
  and infrared (IR) wavelengths. This paper summarizes the capabilities
  of the ATST first-light instrumentation with focus on prominence and
  filament science.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Future Diagnostic Capabilities: The 4-meter Daniel K. Inouye
    Solar Telescope
Authors: Berger, Thomas; Reardon, Kevin; Elmore, David; Woeger,
   Friedrich; Tritschler, Alexandra; Rimmele, Thomas
2014cosp...40E.294B    Altcode:
  We discuss the observational capabilities of the Daniel K. Inouye
  Solar Telescope (DKSIT), formerly known as the Advanced Technology
  Solar Telescope (ATST), currently under construction on Haleakala
  Mountain on the island of Maui, Hawaii, with first light anticipated
  in mid-2019. The DKIST will be a 4-meter aperture Gregorian telescope
  with advanced environmental control and adaptive optics capable of
  producing diffraction-limited resolution in visible light of 0.03"
  or about 20 km in the solar photosphere. The first light instrument
  suite will include the Visible Broadband Imager (VBI), an interference
  filter-based instrument capable of 30 Hz imaging of photospheric and
  chromospheric magnetic structures in the 380 to 800 nm wavelength
  range. All VBI images will be reconstructed in near-real-time using
  the KISIP speckle reconstruction algorithm adapted to the DKIST
  optical and AO configuration. The Visible Spectropolarimeter (ViSP)
  instrument being fabricated by the High Altitude Observatory (HAO) will
  enable high-precision slit-spectropolarimetery in any three spectral
  regions from 380 to 900 nm. The ViSP instrument will be the highest
  precision spectropolarimeter ever produced with a spatial resolution
  of approximately 40 km at 600 nm and temporal resolution of 10s to
  achieve 1e-03 polarimetric precision. The Visible Tunable Filter (VTF)
  instrument under fabrication at the Kiepenheuer Institute for Solar
  Physics (KIS) is a triple-etalon Fabry-Perot imaging spectropolarimeter
  instrument capable of diffraction limited measurements of the Fe I
  630.2 nm and Ca II 854.2 nm spectral lines for Doppler and magnetic
  measurements in the photosphere and chromosphere, respectively. The
  VTF will also enable the highest spatial and temporal resolution
  observations yet achieved in the H-alpha line for detailed studies of
  chromospheric dynamics in response to photospheric magnetic drivers. The
  Diffraction-Limited Near-IR Spectropolarimeter (DL-NiRSP) and the
  Cryogenic Near-IR Spectropolarimeter (Cryo-NiRSP) instruments, both
  under fabrication at the University of Hawaii, will enable polarimetric
  and spectroscopic investigations in the largely unexplored infra-red
  spectral region. The DL-NiRSP will span 900 nm to 2.5 microns in
  wavelength and include a novel fiber-optic "Integral Field Unit"
  (IFU) for true imaging spectropolarimetry in three simultaneous
  spectral regions over a variable field of view. This instrument
  will enable revolutionary measurements of prominence magnetic fields
  and will also, in the wider field mode, enable coronal polarimetric
  studies. The Cryo-NiRSP instrument spans the 1--5 micron wavelength
  range and will make near-diffraction limited 0.3" resolution slit-scan
  measurements of the coronal magnetic field out to 1.3 solar radii
  with temporal resolution measured in minutes. The DKIST facility
  will undergo extensive polarimetric calibration to ensure that the
  ultimate goal of 5e-04 polarimetic precision is obtainable under the
  best conditions. All of the data from the DKIST will be transmitted
  to the central DKIST data center in Boulder, Colorado where automated
  reduction and calibration pipelines will rapidly provide the community
  with calibrated data products for use in science investigations. The
  DKIST will also be operated in a "Service Mode" access model in which
  investigators will not be required to travel to the telescope to
  accomplish their science observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: ATST and Solar AO state of art
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas; Woeger, Friedrich; Marino, Jose
2013aoel.confE.108R    Altcode:
  The 4 meter aperture Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) is
  an ELT for solar astronomy, and as such will address a broad range
  of science questions that require its AO system to operate in several
  different observing scenarios. We review the science drivers that lead
  to the most demanding ATST AO system requirements, such as high Strehl
  ratios at visible wavelengths, MCAO correction, and photon starved,
  extended FOV wavefront sensing using large, faint structures at the
  limb of the Sun. Within the context of exisiting high-order AO systems
  for solar telescopes we present an overview over the current ATST AO
  system design and capabilities. Finally, we will describe the widely
  used post-facto image processing techniques of AO corrected solar
  imaging and spectroscopic data that are required to achieve the desired
  spatial resolution especially at the short end (380 nm) of the visible
  spectrum over ATST's full FOV. We will lay out how these techniques will
  be supported in the AO system to help ATST achieve its scientific goals.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope Construction Status
    Report
Authors: McMullin, Joseph P.; Rimmele, T. R.; Warner, M.; Berger,
   T.; Keil, S. L.
2013SPD....4440001M    Altcode:
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will provide observing
  capabilities in the visible through infrared wavelengths with
  unprecedented resolution and sensitivity. Designed to study solar
  magnetism that controls the solar wind, flares, CMEs and variability in
  the Sun's output, the ATST will be capable of detecting and spatially
  resolving the fundamental astrophysical processes at their intrinsic
  scales throughout the solar atmosphere. The 4-m class facility is
  currently under construction in Maui, HI on the Haleakala Observatories
  site with a scheduled completion of July 2019. Since the start of
  site construction in December of 2012, significant progress has been
  made toward the development of the observatory buildings (excavation,
  foundations, working towards the steel erection). In addition, off-site,
  the major subsystems of the telescope have been contracted, designs are
  complete and fabrication is underway. We review the science drivers,
  design details, technical challenges, and provide a construction status
  update on the subsystems and their integration.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope: Science Drivers and
    Construction Status
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas; Berger, Thomas; McMullin, Joseph; Keil,
   Stephen; Goode, Phil; Knoelker, Michael; Kuhn, Jeff; Rosner, Robert;
   Casini, Roberto; Lin, Haosheng; Woeger, Friedrich; von der Luehe,
   Oskar; Tritschler, Alexandra; Atst Team
2013EGUGA..15.6305R    Altcode:
  The 4-meter Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) currently
  under construction on the 3000 meter peak of Haleakala on Maui,
  Hawaii will be the world's most powerful solar telescope and the
  leading ground-based resource for studying solar magnetism. The
  solar atmosphere is permeated by a 'magnetic carpet' that constantly
  reweaves itself to control solar irradiance and its effects on Earth's
  climate, the solar wind, and space weather phenomena such as flares and
  coronal mass ejections. Precise measurement of solar magnetic fields
  requires a large-aperture solar telescope capable of resolving a few
  tens of kilometers on the solar surface. With its 4 meter aperture,
  the ATST will for the first time resolve magnetic structure at the
  intrinsic scales of plasma convection and turbulence. The ATST's
  ability to perform accurate and precise spectroscopic and polarimetric
  measurements of magnetic fields in all layers of the solar atmosphere,
  including accurate mapping of the elusive coronal magnetic fields,
  will be transformative in advancing our understanding of the magnetic
  solar atmosphere. The ATST will utilize the Sun as an important astro-
  and plasma-physics "laboratory" demonstrating key aspects of omnipresent
  cosmic magnetic fields. The ATST construction effort is led by the US
  National Solar Observatory. State-of-the-art instrumentation will be
  constructed by US and international partner institutions. The technical
  challenges the ATST is facing are numerous and include the design of the
  off-axis main telescope, the development of a high order adaptive optics
  system that delivers a corrected beam to the instrument laboratory,
  effective handling of the solar heat load on optical and structural
  elements, and minimizing scattered light to enable observations
  of the faint corona. The ATST project has transitioned from design
  and development to its construction phase. The project has awarded
  design and fabrication contracts for major telescope subsystems. Site
  construction has commenced following the successful conclusion of
  the site permitting process. Science goals and construction status of
  telescope and instrument systems will be discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Active Optical Control of Quasi-Static Aberrations for ATST
Authors: Johnson, L. C.; Upton, R.; Rimmele, T. R.; Hubbard, R.;
   Barden, S. C.
2012ASPC..463..315J    Altcode:
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) requires active control
  of quasi-static telescope aberrations in order to achieve the image
  quality set by its science requirements. Four active mirrors will
  be used to compensate for optical misalignments induced by changing
  gravitational forces and thermal gradients. These misalignments
  manifest themselves primarily as low-order wavefront aberrations that
  will be measured by a Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor. When operating
  in closed-loop with the wavefront sensor, the active optics control
  algorithm uses a linear least-squares reconstructor incorporating
  force constraints to limit force applied to the primary mirror
  while also incorporating a neutral-point constraint on the secondary
  mirror to limit pointing errors. The resulting system compensates for
  astigmatism and defocus with rigid-body motion of the secondary mirror
  and higher-order aberrations with primary mirror bending modes. We
  demonstrate this reconstruction method and present simulation results
  that apply the active optics correction to aberrations generated by
  finite-element modeling of thermal and gravitational effects over
  a typical day of ATST operation. Quasi-static wavefront errors are
  corrected to within limits set by wavefront sensor noise in all cases
  with very little force applied to the primary mirror surface and
  minimal pointing correction needed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Limb Adaptive Optics: A Test of Wavefront Sensors
    and Algorithms
Authors: Taylor, G. E.; Rimmele, T. R.; Marino, J.; Tritschler, A.;
   McAteer, R. T. J.
2012ASPC..463..321T    Altcode:
  In order to advance our understanding of solar prominences, we need
  to be able to observe them at high spatial, spectral and temporal
  resolution. In order to determine physical properties of these cool
  and faint coronal structures, however, one is forced to use long
  exposure times, particularly in spectroscopic and spectropolarimetric
  applications. It is thus crucial that image stabilization is provided,
  preferrably in form of an adaptive optics (AO) system that is capable
  to lock onto the off-limb prominence structure, potentially providing
  diffraction limited imaging. We investigate the preliminary design
  of such a solar-limb AO system based on a correlating Shack-Hartmann
  sensor. As an alternative we also studied a solar-limb AO wavefront
  sensor using a phase-diverse approach.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Construction of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope -
    A Progress Report.
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Keil, S.; McMullin, J.; Goode, P. R.;
   Knoelker, M.; Kuhn, J. R.; Rosner, R.; ATST Team
2012IAUSS...6E.206R    Altcode:
  The 4m Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be the most
  powerful solar telescope and the world's leading ground-based resource
  for studying solar magnetism that controls the solar wind, flares,
  coronal mass ejections and variability in the Sun's output. The ATST
  will provide high resolution and high sensitivity observations of the
  dynamic solar magnetic fields throughout the solar atmosphere, including
  the corona at infrared wavelengths. With its 4 m aperture, ATST will
  resolve magnetic features at their intrinsic scales. A high order
  adaptive optics system delivers a corrected beam to the initial set of
  five state-of-the-art, facility class instrumentation located in the
  coude laboratory facility. Photopheric and chromospheric magnetometry
  is part of the key mission of four of these instruments. Coronal
  magnetometry and spectroscopy will be performed by two of these
  instruments at infrared wavelengths. The ATST project has transitioned
  from design and development to its construction phase. Site construction
  is expected to begin in the first half of 2012. The project has awarded
  design and fabrication contracts for major telescope subsystems. A
  robust instrument program has been established and all instruments
  have passed preliminary design reviews or critical design reviews. A
  brief summary of the science goals and observational requirements of
  the ATST will be given, followed by a summary of the project status of
  the telescope and discussion of the approach to integrating instruments
  into the facility.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Construction of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Keil, S.; McMullin, J.; Knölker, M.; Kuhn,
   J. R.; Goode, P. R.; Rosner, R.; Casini, R.; Lin, H.; Tritschler,
   A.; Wöger, F.; ATST Team
2012ASPC..463..377R    Altcode:
  The 4m Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be the most
  powerful solar telescope and the world's leading ground-based resource
  for studying solar magnetism that controls the solar wind, flares,
  coronal mass ejections and variability in the Sun's output. The
  project has entered its construction phase. Major subsystems have
  been contracted. As its highest priority science driver ATST shall
  provide high resolution and high sensitivity observations of the
  dynamic solar magnetic fields throughout the solar atmosphere,
  including the corona at infrared wavelengths. With its 4m aperture,
  ATST will resolve features at 0.″03 at visible wavelengths and
  obtain 0.″1 resolution at the magnetically highly sensitive near
  infrared wavelengths. A high order adaptive optics system delivers a
  corrected beam to the initial set of state-of-the-art, facility class
  instrumentation located in the Coudé laboratory facility. The initial
  set of first generation instruments consists of five facility class
  instruments, including imagers and spectro-polarimeters. The high
  polarimetric sensitivity and accuracy required for measurements of
  the illusive solar magnetic fields place strong constraints on the
  polarization analysis and calibration. Development and construction
  of a four-meter solar telescope presents many technical challenges,
  including thermal control of the enclosure, telescope structure and
  optics and wavefront control. A brief overview of the science goals
  and observational requirements of the ATST will be given, followed by a
  summary of the design status of the telescope and its instrumentation,
  including design status of major subsystems, such as the telescope
  mount assembly, enclosure, mirror assemblies, and wavefront correction

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: 2nd ATST-EAST Workshop in Solar Physics: Magnetic Fields from
    the Photosphere to the Corona
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Tritschler, A.; Wöger, F.; Collados Vera,
   M.; Socas-Navarro, H.; Schlichenmaier, R.; Carlsson, M.; Berger, T.;
   Cadavid, A.; Gilbert, P. R.; Goode, P. R.; Knölker, M.
2012ASPC..463.....R    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Expected Performance of Adaptive Optics in Large Aperture
    Solar Telescopes
Authors: Marino, J.; Rimmele, T. R.
2012ASPC..463..329M    Altcode:
  Solar adaptive optics has become an indispensable tool for high
  resolution solar observations. New generation solar telescopes, such
  as the 4 m aperture Advanced Technology Solar Telescope, introduce
  a new set of challenges to solar adaptive optics correction. Larger
  aperture sizes are more susceptible to the effects on AO correction
  performance of the extended field-of-view of the cross-correlating
  Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor. Observations at large zenith angles
  further enhance these field-of-view effects and can introduce more
  performance reductions due to atmospheric dispersion. We study the
  expected correction performance of solar adaptive optics systems in
  large aperture solar telescopes using an end-to-end adaptive optics
  simulation package.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope: design and early
    construction
Authors: McMullin, Joseph P.; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Keil, Stephen L.;
   Warner, Mark; Barden, Samuel; Bulau, Scott; Craig, Simon; Goodrich,
   Bret; Hansen, Eric; Hegwer, Steve; Hubbard, Robert; McBride, William;
   Shimko, Steve; Wöger, Friedrich; Ditsler, Jennifer
2012SPIE.8444E..07M    Altcode:
  The National Solar Observatory’s (NSO) Advanced Technology Solar
  Telescope (ATST) is the first large U.S. solar telescope accessible
  to the worldwide solar physics community to be constructed in more
  than 30 years. The 4-meter diameter facility will operate over a broad
  wavelength range (0.35 to 28 μm ), employing adaptive optics systems to
  achieve diffraction limited imaging and resolve features approximately
  20 km on the Sun; the key observational parameters (collecting area,
  spatial resolution, spectral coverage, polarization accuracy, low
  scattered light) enable resolution of the theoretically-predicted,
  fine-scale magnetic features and their dynamics which modulate the
  radiative output of the sun and drive the release of magnetic energy
  from the Sun’s atmosphere in the form of flares and coronal mass
  ejections. In 2010, the ATST received a significant fraction of its
  funding for construction. In the subsequent two years, the project has
  hired staff and opened an office on Maui. A number of large industrial
  contracts have been placed throughout the world to complete the detailed
  designs and begin constructing the major telescope subsystems. These
  contracts have included the site development, AandE designs, mirrors,
  polishing, optic support assemblies, telescope mount and coudé
  rotator structures, enclosure, thermal and mechanical systems, and
  high-level software and controls. In addition, design development
  work on the instrument suite has undergone significant progress;
  this has included the completion of preliminary design reviews (PDR)
  for all five facility instruments. Permitting required for physically
  starting construction on the mountaintop of Haleakalā, Maui has also
  progressed. This paper will review the ATST goals and specifications,
  describe each of the major subsystems under construction, and review
  the contracts and lessons learned during the contracting and early
  construction phases. Schedules for site construction, key factory
  testing of major subsystems, and integration, test and commissioning
  activities will also be discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Quasi-static wavefront control for the Advanced Technology
    Solar Telescope
Authors: Johnson, Luke C.; Upton, R.; Rimmele, T.; Barden, S.
2012SPIE.8444E..3OJ    Altcode:
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) requires active control
  of quasi-static telescope aberrations in order to meet image quality
  standards set by its science requirements. Wavefront control is managed
  by the Telescope Control System, with many telescope subsystems
  playing key roles. We present the design of the ATST quasi-static
  wavefront and alignment control architecture and the algorithms used to
  control its four active mirrors. Two control algorithms are presented,
  one that minimizes force on M1 actuators and another that employs
  a neutral-pointing constraint on M2 to reduce pointing error. We
  also present simulations that generate typical daily active mirror
  trajectories which correct optical misalignments due to changing
  gravitational and thermal loads.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ziegler-Nichols frequency response method for high-order
    adaptive optics system of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Curamen, Joseph; Johnson, Luke; Rimmele, Thomas
2012SPIE.8447E..69C    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The wavefront correction control system for the Advanced
    Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Kinney, Ellyne K.; Richards, Kit; Johnson, Luke; Rimmele,
   Thomas R.; Barden, Samuel C.
2012SPIE.8447E..2MK    Altcode:
  The ATST Wavefront Correction Control System (WCCS) is the high-level
  control software for the Wavefront Correction (WFC) system to be
  employed in the new Advanced Technology Solar Telescope. The WFC is
  comprised of a set of subsystems: the high-order adaptive optics
  system for correction of wavefront aberrations, an active optics
  system that calculates corrections for low-order distortions caused by
  optical misalignments, a context viewing camera to provide quick-look
  quality analysis data, and a limb guider for positioning an occulting
  mask on the solar disk. The operation and configuration of the WFC
  is determined by the operational modes set by the operator. The
  Telescope Control System (TCS) sends these operational modes to the
  WCCS, which is the interface between the telescope and the WFC. The
  WCCS adopts a modular approach to the organization of the software. At
  the top-level there is a high-level management controller which is the
  interface to the TCS. This management controller is responsible for the
  validation of commands received from the TCS and for the coordination
  and synchronization of the operation of the WFC subsystems. Separate
  subsystem controllers manage the functional behavior of each WFC
  subsystem. In this way the WCCS provides a consistent interface to
  the TCS for each subsystem while synchronizing and coordinating the
  components of the Wavefront Correction system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Characterization of an off-the-shelf detector for high-order
    wavefront sensing in solar adaptive optics
Authors: Johnson, Luke C.; Richards, K.; Wöger, F.; Barden, Samuel;
   Rimmele, T.
2012SPIE.8447E..6DJ    Altcode:
  When completed, the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will
  be the largest and most technologically advanced solar telescope in
  the world. As such, it faces many challenges that have not previously
  been solved. One of these challenges is the high-order wavefront sensor
  (HOWFS) for the ATST adaptive optics system. The HOWFS requires a 960 x
  960 detector array that must run at a 2 kHz frame rate in order for the
  adaptive optics to achieve its required bandwidth. This detector must
  be able to accurately image low-contrast solar granulation in order to
  provide usable wavefront information. We have identified the Vision
  Research DS-440 as an off-the-shelf solution for the HOWFS detector
  and demonstrate tests proving that the camera will be able to lock the
  adaptive optics loop on solar granulation in commonly-experienced
  daytime seeing conditions. Tests presented quantify the noise,
  linearity, gain, stability, and well depth of the camera. Laboratory
  tests with artificial targets demonstrate its ability to accurately
  track low-contrast objects and on-sky demonstrations showcase the
  camera's performance in realistic observing conditions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Advanced Technology Solar Telescope Construction: Progress
    Report
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; McMullin, J.; Keil, S.; Goode, P.;
   Knoelker, M.; Kuhn, J.; Rosner, R.; ATST Team
2012AAS...22012202R    Altcode:
  The 4m Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) on Haleakala will be
  the most powerful solar telescope and the world’s leading ground-based
  resource for studying solar magnetism that controls the solar wind,
  flares, coronal mass ejections and variability in the Sun’s
  output. The ATST will provide high resolution and high sensitivity
  observations of the dynamic solar magnetic fields throughout the solar
  atmosphere, including the corona at infrared wavelengths. With its 4
  m aperture, ATST will resolve magnetic features at their intrinsic
  scales. A high order adaptive optics system delivers a corrected
  beam to the initial set of five state-of-the-art, facility class
  instrumentation located in the coude laboratory facility. Photopheric
  and chromospheric magnetometry is part of the key mission of four
  of these instruments. Coronal magnetometry and spectroscopy will be
  performed by two of these instruments at infrared wavelengths. The
  ATST project has transitioned from design and development to its
  construction phase. Site construction is expected to begin in April
  2012. The project has awarded design and fabrication contracts for major
  telescope subsystems. A robust instrument program has been established
  and all instruments have passed preliminary design reviews or critical
  design reviews. A brief overview of the science goals and observational
  requirements of the ATST will be given, followed by a summary of the
  project status of the telescope and discussion of the approach to
  integrating instruments into the facility. <P />The National Science
  Foundation (NSF) through the National Solar Observatory (NSO) funds
  the ATST Project. The NSO is operated under a cooperative agreement
  between the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy,
  Inc. (AURA) and NSF.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Adaptive Optics
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; Marino, Jose
2011LRSP....8....2R    Altcode:
  Adaptive optics (AO) has become an indispensable tool at ground-based
  solar telescopes. AO enables the ground-based observer to overcome the
  adverse effects of atmospheric seeing and obtain diffraction limited
  observations. Over the last decade adaptive optics systems have
  been deployed at major ground-based solar telescopes and revitalized
  ground-based solar astronomy. The relatively small aperture of solar
  telescopes and the bright source make solar AO possible for visible
  wavelengths where the majority of solar observations are still
  performed. Solar AO systems enable diffraction limited observations
  of the Sun for a significant fraction of the available observing time
  at ground-based solar telescopes, which often have a larger aperture
  than equivalent space based observatories, such as HINODE. New ground
  breaking scientific results have been achieved with solar adaptive
  optics and this trend continues. New large aperture telescopes
  are currently being deployed or are under construction. With the
  aid of solar AO these telescopes will obtain observations of the
  highly structured and dynamic solar atmosphere with unprecedented
  resolution. This paper reviews solar adaptive optics techniques and
  summarizes the recent progress in the field of solar adaptive optics. An
  outlook to future solar AO developments, including a discussion of
  Multi-Conjugate AO (MCAO) and Ground-Layer AO (GLAO) will be given.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope - Constructing The
    World's Largest Solar Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; Keil, S.; Wagner, J.; ATST Team
2011SPD....42.0801R    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43S.0801R
  The 4m Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be the most
  powerful solar telescope and the world's leading ground-based resource
  for studying solar magnetism that controls the solar wind, flares,
  coronal mass ejections and variability in the Sun's output. The ATST
  shall provide high resolution and high sensitivity observations of
  the dynamic solar magnetic fields throughout the solar atmosphere,
  including the corona at infrared wavelengths. With its 4 m aperture,
  ATST will resolve features at 0.03" at visible wavelengths and obtain
  0.1" resolution at the magnetically highly sensitive near infrared
  wavelengths. A high order adaptive optics system delivers a corrected
  beam to the initial set of five state-of-the-art, facility class
  instrumentation located in the coude laboratory facility. Coronal
  magnetometry and spectroscopy will be performed by two of these
  instruments at infrared wavelengths. <P />In January 2010 the ATST
  project transitioned from design and development to the construction
  phase. The project has awarded contracts for major subsystems, including
  the 4m primary mirror, architectural and engineering services related to
  the Support Facilities, Enclosure construction design, Telescope Mount
  Assembly, and Facilities Thermal System construction design. The State
  of Hawai'I Board of Land and Natural Resources approved the Conservation
  District Use Permit submitted by the University of Hawai'I at their
  December 6, 2010 meeting in Honolulu, HI. <P />A brief overview of
  the science goals and observational requirements of the ATST will be
  given, followed by a summary of the project status of the telescope and
  discussion of the approach to integrating instruments into the facility.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Limb AO: Seeing the Hidden Detail in Solar Prominences
Authors: Taylor, Gregory; Rimmele, T.; Marino, J.; McAteer, J.
2011SPD....42.1509T    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43S.1509T
  In order to understand Solar Prominences, we need to observe them
  at sub-arcsecond resolution, with a sub-second cadence. Present
  image reconstruction techniques, such as Speckle Interferometry, are
  capable of delivering high resolution images, but at a slow cadence. We
  propose the design for a Solar Limb Adaptive Optics system that would
  allow images to be captured at sub-second cadence with sub-arcsecond
  resolution. The challenge, with Solar Limb AO, is the use of faint Hα
  prominence structure near the limb, to derive wavefront measurements
  at hight speed. Regular, on-disk Solar Adaptive Optics have sufficient
  photon flux available, for the subaperture based wavefront sensor. In
  contrast, a Shack Hartmann wave- front sensor, which uses faint Hα
  prominence structure as its reference, is photon starved. Full aperture
  sensor concepts, such as Phase Diversity, may have to be considered. It
  is hoped that such a system, if successful, would be implemented on
  the upcoming Advanced Technology Solar Telescope.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Visible Broadband Imager: The Sun at High Spatial and
    Temporal Resolution
Authors: Friedrich, Woeger; Tritschler, A.; Uitenbroek, H.; Rimmele, T.
2011SPD....42.2001F    Altcode: 2011BAAS..43S.2001F
  The Visible Broadband Imager (VBI) will be the first of the five
  first-light instruments for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
  (ATST). It is designed to observe the solar atmosphere at heights
  ranging from photosphere to chromosphere. High frame-rate detectors
  that sample the FOV of up to 2.8 arcmin in diameter critically near or
  at the diffraction limit of ATST's 4 meter aperture will facilitate near
  real-time speckle reconstruction imaging. With its focus on high-spatial
  resolution, the VBI will be addressing scientific questions related to
  the smallest structures visible in the solar atmosphere today with high
  photometric precision. The capability to observe the solar atmosphere
  with a cadence of about 3 seconds per reconstructed image will enable
  the VBI to temporally resolve fast evolving structures. <P />In this
  contribution we present the current design of the VBI and highlight
  some scientific questions related to fast evolving, small-scale features
  within the solar atmosphere that the VBI will address.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Polarization Workshop 6
Authors: Kuhn, J. R.; Harrington, D. M.; Lin, H.; Berdyugina, S. V.;
   Trujillo-Bueno, J.; Keil, S. L.; Rimmele, T.
2011ASPC..437.....K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: ATST: The Largest Polarimeter
Authors: Keil, S. L.; Rimmele, T. R.; Wagner, J.; Elmore, D.; ATST Team
2011ASPC..437..319K    Altcode:
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope's large collecting area,
  combined with diffraction limited images delivered by adaptive optics,
  will give it the ability to measure solar magnetic fields down to
  scales of a few 20-30 km in the solar photosphere and the ability to
  measure chromospheric and coronal magnetic fields.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Stellar Imager (SI): developing and testing a predictive
    dynamo model for the Sun by imaging other stars
Authors: Carpenter, Kenneth G.; Schrijver, Carolus J.; Karovska,
   Margarita; Kraemer, Steve; Lyon, Richard; Mozurkewich, David;
   Airapetian, Vladimir; Adams, John C.; Allen, Ronald J.; Brown, Alex;
   Bruhweiler, Fred; Conti, Alberto; Christensen-Dalsgaard, Joergen;
   Cranmer, Steve; Cuntz, Manfred; Danchi, William; Dupree, Andrea; Elvis,
   Martin; Evans, Nancy; Giampapa, Mark; Harper, Graham; Hartman, Kathy;
   Labeyrie, Antoine; Leitner, Jesse; Lillie, Chuck; Linsky, Jeffrey L.;
   Lo, Amy; Mighell, Ken; Miller, David; Noecker, Charlie; Parrish, Joe;
   Phillips, Jim; Rimmele, Thomas; Saar, Steve; Sasselov, Dimitar; Stahl,
   H. Philip; Stoneking, Eric; Strassmeier, Klaus; Walter, Frederick;
   Windhorst, Rogier; Woodgate, Bruce; Woodruff, Robert
2010arXiv1011.5214C    Altcode:
  The Stellar Imager mission concept is a space-based UV/Optical
  interferometer designed to resolve surface magnetic activity and
  subsurface structure and flows of a population of Sun-like stars,
  in order to accelerate the development and validation of a predictive
  dynamo model for the Sun and enable accurate long-term forecasting of
  solar/stellar magnetic activity.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Active reconstruction and alignment strategies for the Advanced
    Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Upton, Robert; Rimmele, Thomas
2010SPIE.7793E..0EU    Altcode: 2010SPIE.7793E..11U
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) is a 4m off-axis
  telescope with a Gregorian front end. At the time of its construction
  it will be the world's largest solar astronomical telescope. During
  scientific operations the ATST mirrors and structure will be deformed
  due to thermal and gravitational loading. The ATST team has developed
  a quasi-static alignment scheme that utilizes the wavefront sensing
  signals from at least one and as many as three wavefront sensors in
  the telescope science field of view, and active figure control of
  the primary mirror and rigid body control of the secondary mirror to
  achieve least-squares optical control of the telescope. This paper
  presents the quasi-static alignment model for the ATST, and three
  different active alignment schemes that are the damped least-squares
  control, force optimized control that defines a least-squares aligned
  state of the telescope subject to minimum primary actuator force,
  and pivot-point control of the secondary mirror. All three strategies
  achieve the desired minimum RMS wavefront error, but demonstrate
  different optimized states of the telescope.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Force-optimized alignment for optical control of the Advanced
    Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Upton, Robert; Cho, Myung; Rimmele, Thomas
2010ApOpt..49G.105U    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The adaptive optics and wavefront correction systems for the
    Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Richards, K.; Rimmele, T.; Hegwer, S. L.; Upton, R. S.;
   Woeger, F.; Marino, J.; Gregory, S.; Goodrich, B.
2010SPIE.7736E..08R    Altcode: 2010SPIE.7736E...6R
  The high order adaptive optics (HOAO) system is the centerpiece of
  the ATST wavefront correction system. The ATST wavefront correction
  system is required to achieve a Strehl of S = 0.6 or better at
  visible wavelength. The system design closely follows the successful
  HOAO implementation at the Dunn Solar Telescope and is based on the
  correlating Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor. In addition to HOAO
  the ATST will utilize wavefront sensors to implement active optics
  (aO) and Quasi Static Alignment (QSA) of the telescope optics, which
  includes several off-axis elements. Provisions for implementation of
  Multi-conjugate adaptive optics have been made with the design of the
  optical path that feeds the instrumentation at the coudé station. We
  will give an overview of the design of individual subsystems of the
  ATST wavefront correction system and describe some of the unique
  features of the ATST wavefront correction system, such as the need
  for thermally controlled corrective elements.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar multiconjugate adaptive optics at the Dunn Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Woeger, F.; Marino, J.; Richards, K.; Hegwer,
   S.; Berkefeld, T.; Soltau, D.; Schmidt, D.; Waldmann, T.
2010SPIE.7736E..31R    Altcode: 2010SPIE.7736E.101R
  Solar observations are performed over an extended field of view and
  the isoplanatic patch over which conventional adaptive optics (AO)
  provides diffraction limited resolution is a severe limitation. The
  development of multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO) for the next
  generation large aperture solar telescopes is thus a top priority. The
  Sun is an ideal object for the development of MCAO since solar structure
  provides multiple "guide stars" in any desired configuration. At the
  Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) we implemented a dedicated MCAO bench with
  the goal of developing wellcharacterized, operational MCAO. The MCAO
  system uses two deformable mirrors conjugated to the telescope entrance
  pupil and a layer in the upper atmosphere, respectively. The high
  altitude deformable mirror can be placed at conjugates ranging from
  2km to 10km altitude. We have successfully and stably locked the MCAO
  system on solar granulation and demonstrated the MCAO system's ability
  to significantly extend the corrected field of view. We present results
  derived from analysis of imagery taken simultaneously with conventional
  AO and MCAO. We also present first results from solar Ground Layer AO
  (GLAO) experiments.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Advanced Technology Solar Telescope project management
Authors: Wagner, J.; Hansen, E.; Hubbard, R.; Rimmele, T. R.; Keil, S.
2010SPIE.7738E..0QW    Altcode: 2010SPIE.7738E..22W
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) has recently received
  National Science Foundation (NSF) approval to begin the construction
  process. ATST will be the most powerful solar telescope and the world's
  leading resource for studying solar magnetism that controls the solar
  wind, flares, coronal mass ejections and variability in the Sun's
  output. This paper gives an overview of the project, and describes the
  project management principles and practices that have been developed
  to optimize both the project's success as well as meeting requirements
  of the project's funding agency.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Analysis of adaptive optics control for the Advanced Technology
    Solar Telescope
Authors: Marino, Jose; Wöger, Friedrich; Rimmele, Thomas
2010SPIE.7736E..3EM    Altcode: 2010SPIE.7736E.114M
  Large aperture solar telescopes, such as the 4 meter aperture Advanced
  Technology Solar Telescope (ATST), depend on high order adaptive optics
  (AO) to achieve the telescope's diffraction limited resolution. The
  AO system not only corrects incoming distortions introduced by
  atmospheric turbulence, its performance also plays a critical
  role for the operation of other subsystems and affects the results
  obtained by downstream scientific instrumentation. For this reason,
  robust and optimal operation of the AO system is vital to maximize
  the scientific output of ATST. In order to optimize performance, we
  evaluate different strategies to obtain the control matrix of the AO
  system. The dependency of AO performance on various control parameters,
  such as different system calibration and reconstruction schemes, is
  analyzed using an AO simulation tool. The AO simulation tool provides
  a realistic solar AO system simulation and allows a detailed evaluation
  of the performance achieved by different calibration and reconstruction
  methods. The results of this study will guide the optimization of the
  AO system during design and operations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope: beginning construction
    of the world's largest solar telescope
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Wagner, J.; Keil, S.; Elmore, D.; Hubbard,
   R.; Hansen, E.; Warner, M.; Jeffers, P.; Phelps, L.; Marshall, H.;
   Goodrich, B.; Richards, K.; Hegwer, S.; Kneale, R.; Ditsler, J.
2010SPIE.7733E..0GR    Altcode:
  The 4m Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be the most
  powerful solar telescope and the world's leading ground-based resource
  for studying solar magnetism that controls the solar wind, flares,
  coronal mass ejections and variability in the Sun's output. The project
  has successfully passed its final design review and the Environmental
  Impact Study for construction of ATST on Haleakala, Maui, HI has
  been concluded in December of 2009. The project is now entering
  its construction phase. As its highest priority science driver ATST
  shall provide high resolution and high sensitivity observations of
  the dynamic solar magnetic fields throughout the solar atmosphere,
  including the corona at infrared wavelengths. With its 4 m aperture,
  ATST will resolve features at 0."03 at visible wavelengths and
  obtain 0."1 resolution at the magnetically highly sensitive near
  infrared wavelengths. A high order adaptive optics system delivers a
  corrected beam to the initial set of state-of-the-art, facility class
  instrumentation located in the coudé laboratory facility. The initial
  set of first generation instruments consists of five facility class
  instruments, including imagers and spectropolarimeters. The high
  polarimetric sensitivity and accuracy required for measurements of
  the illusive solar magnetic fields place strong constraints on the
  polarization analysis and calibration. Development and construction
  of a fourmeter solar telescope presents many technical challenges,
  including thermal control of the enclosure, telescope structure and
  optics and wavefront control. A brief overview of the science goals
  and observational requirements of the ATST will be given, followed by a
  summary of the design status of the telescope and its instrumentation,
  including design status of major subsystems, such as the telescope
  mount assembly, enclosure, mirror assemblies, and wavefront correction

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope coude lab thermal
    environment
Authors: Phelps, Leellen; Rimmele, Thomas; Hubbard, Robert P.;
   Elmore, David
2010SPIE.7733E..3UP    Altcode: 2010SPIE.7733E.120P
  The ATST scientific instruments are located on benches installed on
  a large diameter rotating coud lab floor. The light path from the
  telescope to the instruments is greater than 38 meters and passes from
  external ambient conditions to the 'shirt-sleeve' environment of the
  coudé lab. In order to minimize any contribution to local seeing or
  wavefront distortion, two strategies are implemented. First, an air
  curtain is installed where the beam passes from ambient conditions
  to the lab space and second, the coudé lab environmental conditions
  are tightly controlled. This paper presents the design parameters
  of the environmental conditions, the basis of each design parameter,
  an overview of the equipment and components of the system planned to
  control those conditions, and the thermal and computational fluid
  dynamic analyses that have been performed in support of the system
  as designed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The ATST visible broadband imager: a case study for real-time
    image reconstruction and optimal data handling
Authors: Wöger, Friedrich; Uitenbroek, Han; Tritschler, Alexandra;
   McBride, William; Elmore, David; Rimmele, Thomas; Cowan, Bruce;
   Wampler, Steve; Goodrich, Bret
2010SPIE.7735E..21W    Altcode: 2010SPIE.7735E..69W
  At future telescopes, adaptive optics systems will play a role beyond
  the correction of Earth's atmosphere. These systems are capable of
  delivering information that is useful for instrumentation, e.g. if
  reconstruction algorithms are employed to increase the spatial
  resolution of the scientific data. For the 4m aperture Advanced
  Technology Solar Telescope (ATST), a new generation of state-of-the-art
  instrumentation is developed that will deliver observations of the solar
  surface at unsurpassed high spatial resolution. The planned Visual
  Broadband Imager (VBI) is one of those instruments. It will be able
  to record images at an extremely high rate and compute reconstructed
  images close to the telescope's theoretical diffraction limit using
  a speckle interferometry algorithm in near real-time. This algorithm
  has been refined to take data delivered by the adaptive optics system
  into account during reconstruction. The acquisition and reconstruction
  process requires the use of a high-speed data handling infrastructure
  to retrieve the necessary data from both adaptive optics system and
  instrument cameras. We present the current design of this infrastructure
  for the ATST together with a feasibility analysis of the underlying
  algorithms.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Advanced Technology Solar Telescope: A status report
Authors: Keil, S. L.; Rimmele, T. R.; Wagner, J.; ATST Team
2010AN....331..609K    Altcode:
  Magnetic fields control the inconstant Sun. The key to understanding
  solar variability and its direct impact on the Earth rests with
  understanding all aspects of these magnetic fields. The Advanced
  Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) has been design specifically for
  magnetic remote sensing. Its collecting area, spatial resolution,
  scattered light, polarization properties, and wavelength performance
  all insure ATST will be able to observe magnetic fields at all heights
  in the solar atmosphere from photosphere to corona. After several
  years of design efforts, ATST has been approved by the U.S. National
  Science Foundation to begin construction with a not to exceed cost cap
  of approximately $298M. Work packages for major telescope components
  will be released for bid over the next several months. An application
  for a building permit has been submitted.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Scientific instrumentation for the 1.6 m New Solar Telescope
    in Big Bear
Authors: Cao, W.; Gorceix, N.; Coulter, R.; Ahn, K.; Rimmele, T. R.;
   Goode, P. R.
2010AN....331..636C    Altcode:
  The NST (New Solar Telescope), a 1.6 m clear aperture, off-axis
  telescope, is in its commissioning phase at Big Bear Solar Observatory
  (BBSO). It will be the most capable, largest aperture solar telescope
  in the US until the 4 m ATST (Advanced Technology Solar Telescope)
  comes on-line late in the next decade. The NST will be outfitted with
  state-of-the-art scientific instruments at the Nasmyth focus on the
  telescope floor and in the Coudé Lab beneath the telescope. At the
  Nasmyth focus, several filtergraphs already in routine operation
  have offered high spatial resolution photometry in TiO 706 nm,
  H\alpha 656 nm, G-band 430 nm and the near infrared (NIR), with the
  aid of a correlation tracker and image reconstruction system. Also,
  a Cryogenic Infrared Spectrograph (CYRA) is being developed to supply
  high signal-to-noise-ratio spectrometry and polarimetry spanning
  1.0 to 5.0 μm. The Coudé Lab instrumentation will include Adaptive
  Optics (AO), InfraRed Imaging Magnetograph (IRIM), Visible Imaging
  Magnetograph (VIM), and Fast Imaging Solar Spectrograph (FISS). A 308
  sub-aperture (349-actuator deformable mirror) AO system will enable
  nearly diffraction limited observations over the NST's principal
  operating wavelengths from 0.4 μm through 1.7 μm. IRIM and VIM are
  Fabry-Pérot based narrow-band tunable filters, which provide high
  resolution two-dimensional spectroscopic and polarimetric imaging in
  the NIR and visible respectively. FISS is a collaboration between BBSO
  and Seoul National University focussing on chromosphere dynamics. This
  paper reports the up-to-date progress on these instruments including an
  overview of each instrument and details of the current state of design,
  integration, calibration and setup/testing on the NST.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: FIRS: a new instrument for photospheric and chromospheric
    studies at the DST.
Authors: Jaeggli, S. A.; Lin, H.; Mickey, D. L.; Kuhn, J. R.; Hegwer,
   S. L.; Rimmele, T. R.; Penn, M. J.
2010MmSAI..81..763J    Altcode:
  The simultaneous observation of select spectral lines at optical and
  infrared wavelengths allows for the determination of the magnetic
  field at several photospheric and chromospheric heights and thus
  the 3D magnetic field gradient in the solar atmosphere. The Facility
  Infrared Spectropolarimeter (FIRS) is a newly completed, multi-slit,
  dual-beam spectropolarimeter installed at the Dunn Solar Telescope
  (DST) at Sacramento Peak (NSO/SP). Separate optics and polarimeters
  simultaneously observe two band-passes at visible and infrared
  wavelengths with a choice of two modes: the Fe I 6302 Å and 15648 Å
  lines in the photosphere; or the Fe I 6302 Å and He I 10830 Å line
  in the photosphere and high chromosphere, respectively. FIRS can also
  operate simultaneously with a white light camera, G-band imager, and
  the Interferometric Bi-dimensional Spectrometer (IBIS) observing the
  mid-chromospheric Ca II 8542 Å line. The instrument uses four parallel
  slits to sample four slices of the solar surface simultaneously to
  achieve fast, diffraction-limited precision imaging spectropolarimetry,
  enabling the study of MHD phenomena with short dynamic time scales.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics at the Dunn Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Hegwer, S.; Marino, J.; Richards, K.; Schmidt,
   D.; Waldmann, T.; Woeger, F.
2010aoel.confE8002R    Altcode:
  Solar observations are performed over an extended field of view and
  the isoplanatic patch over which conventional adaptive optics (AO)
  provides diffraction limited resolution is a severe limitation. The
  development of multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO) for the next
  generation large aperture solar telescopes is thus a top priority. The
  Sun is an ideal object for the development of MCAO since solar structure
  provides ,,multiple guide stars” in any desired configuration. At
  the Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) we implemented a dedicated MCAO bench
  with the goal of developing well-characterized, operational MCAO. The
  MCAO system uses 2 deformable mirrors conjugated to the telescope
  entrance pupil and a layer in the upper atmosphere, respectively. DM2
  can be placed at conjugates ranging from 2km to 10km altitude. We have
  successfully and stably locked the MCAO system on artificial objects
  (slides), for which turbulence screens are generated directly in front
  of the DMs, as well as solar structure. We present preliminary results
  and discuss future plans.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Recovering the line-of-sight magnetic field in the chromosphere
    from Ca II IR spectra
Authors: Wöger, F.; Wedemeyer-Böhm, S.; Uitenbroek, H.; Rimmele, T.
2010MmSAI..81..598W    Altcode: 2009arXiv0912.3467W
  We propose a method to derive the line-of-sight magnetic flux density
  from measurements in the chromospheric Ca II IR line at 854.2 nm. The
  method combines two well-understood techniques, the center-of-gravity
  and bisector method, in a single hybrid technique. The technique
  is tested with magneto-static simulations of a flux tube. We apply
  the method to observations with the Interferometric Bidimensional
  Spectrometer (IBIS) installed at the Dunn Solar Telescope of the NSO/SP
  to investigate the morphology of the lower chromosphere, with focus on
  the chromospheric counterparts to the underlying photospheric magnetic
  flux elements.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Morphology and Dynamics of Photospheric and Chromospheric
    Magnetic Fields
Authors: Wöger, F.; Wedemeyer-Böhm, S.; Rimmele, T.
2009ASPC..415..319W    Altcode: 2009arXiv0912.3285W
  We use joint observations obtained with the Hinode space observatory
  and the Interferometric Bidimensional Spectrometer (IBIS) installed
  at the DST of the NSO/SP to investigate the morphology and dynamics
  of (a) non-magnetic and (b) magnetic regions in the fluctosphere. In
  inter-network regions with no significant magnetic flux contributions
  above the detection limit of IBIS, we find intensity structures with
  similar characteristics as those seen in numerical simulations by
  Wedemeyer-Böhm et al. (2008) The magnetic flux elements in the network
  are stable and seem to resemble the spatially extended counterparts
  to the underlying photospheric magnetic elements. We will explain
  some of the difficulties in deriving the magnetic field vector from
  observations of the fluctosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope: Science Goals,
    Design and Project Status. (Invited)
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Keil, S. L.; Wagner, J.
2009AGUFMSH53B..10R    Altcode:
  The 4m Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) on Haleakala will be
  the most powerful solar telescope and the world’s leading resource
  for studying solar magnetism that controls the solar wind, flares,
  coronal mass ejections and variability in the Sun’s output. The
  project is about to enter the construction phase and is expected to
  be fully commissioned in 2017. A brief overview of the science goals
  and observational requirements of the ATST will be given followed by a
  summary of the design status of the telescope and its instrumentation
  will during which the technical and engineering challenges the ATST
  project faces will be discussed. ATST will provide high resolution and
  high sensitivity observations of the dynamic solar magnetic fields
  throughout the solar atmosphere, including the corona. With its 4 m
  aperture, ATST will resolve features at 0.”03 (20km on the sun)
  at visible wavelengths. The science requirement for polarimetric
  sensitivity (10-5 relative to intensity) and accuracy (5x10-4
  relative to intensity) place strong constraints on the polarization
  analysis and calibration units. A high order adaptive optics system
  delivers a corrected beam to the initial set of state-of-the-art,
  facility class instrumentation located in the Coude lab facility. A
  few examples of the many unique science capabilities of the 4m ATST
  will be discussed. The initial set of first generation instruments
  includes: 1: the Visible Broadband Imager will provide images at
  the highest possible spatial and temporal resolution at a number
  of specified wavelengths in the range from 390 nm to 860 nm. 2:
  the Visible Spectro-Polarimeter will provide precision vector field
  measurements simultaneously at diverse wavelengths in the visible
  spectrum and thus deliver quantitative diagnostics of the magnetic
  field vector as a function of height in the solar atmosphere, along
  with the associated variation of the thermodynamic properties. 3: the
  Diffraction-Limited Near-Infrared Spectro-Polarimeter will record with
  high temporal cadence the full polarization state of spectral lines
  in the near infrared wavelength regime from 900 nm to 2300 nm. 4:
  the Cryogenic Near Infrared-Spectro-Polarimeter will measure solar
  magnetic fields over a large field-of-view at infrared wavelengths
  from 1000 nm to 5000 nm in the solar corona. 5: the Visible Tunable
  Filter will provide two-dimensional spectroscopy and polarimetry
  by recording diffraction-limited narrow-bandpass images with high
  temporal resolution.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Service-Mode Observations for Ground-Based Solar Physics
Authors: Reardon, K. P.; Rimmele, T.; Tritschler, A.; Cauzzi, G.;
   Wöger, F.; Uitenbroek, H.; Tsuneta, S.; Berger, T.
2009ASPC..415..332R    Altcode: 2009arXiv0909.1522R
  There are significant advantages in combining Hinode observations
  with ground-based instruments that can observe additional spectral
  diagnostics at higher data rates and with greater flexibility. However,
  ground-based observations, because of the random effects of weather
  and seeing as well as the complexities data analysis due to changing
  instrumental configurations, have traditionally been less efficient
  than satellite observations in producing useful datasets. Future large
  ground-based telescopes will need to find new ways to optimize both
  their operational efficiency and scientific output. <P />We have begun
  experimenting with service-mode or queue-mode observations at the Dunn
  Solar Telescope using the Interferometric Bidimensional Spectrometer
  (IBIS) as part of joint Hinode campaigns. We describe our experiences
  and the advantag es of such an observing mode for solar physics.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Morphology and Dynamics of the Low Solar Chromosphere
Authors: Wöger, F.; Wedemeyer-Böhm, S.; Uitenbroek, H.; Rimmele,
   T. R.
2009ApJ...706..148W    Altcode: 2009arXiv0910.1381W
  The Interferometric Bidimensional Spectrometer (IBIS) installed at
  the Dunn Solar Telescope of the NSO/SP is used to investigate the
  morphology and dynamics of the lower chromosphere and the virtually
  non-magnetic fluctosphere below. The study addresses in particular the
  structure of magnetic elements that extend into these layers. We choose
  different quiet-Sun regions inside and outside the coronal holes. In
  inter-network regions with no significant magnetic flux contributions
  above the detection limit of IBIS, we find intensity structures with the
  characteristics of a shock wave pattern. The magnetic flux elements in
  the network are long lived and seem to resemble the spatially extended
  counterparts to the underlying photospheric magnetic elements. We
  suggest a modification to common methods to derive the line-of-sight
  magnetic field strength and explain some of the difficulties in deriving
  the magnetic field vector from observations of the fluctosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Effect of anisoplanatism on the measurement accuracy of an
    extended-source Hartmann-Shack wavefront sensor
Authors: Woeger, Friedrich; Rimmele, Thomas
2009ApOpt..48A..35W    Altcode:
  We analyze the effect of anisoplanatic atmospheric turbulence on the
  measurement accuracy of an extended-source Hartmann-Shack wavefront
  sensor (HSWFS). We have numerically simulated an extended-source
  HSWFS, using a scenery of the solar surface that is imaged through
  anisoplanatic atmospheric turbulence and imaging optics. Solar
  extended-source HSWFSs often use cross-correlation algorithms in
  combination with subpixel shift finding algorithms to estimate the
  wavefront gradient, two of which were tested for their effect on
  the measurement accuracy. We find that the measurement error of an
  extended-source HSWFS is governed mainly by the optical geometry
  of the HSWFS, employed subpixel finding algorithm, and phase
  anisoplanatism. Our results show that effects of scintillation
  anisoplanatism are negligible when cross-correlation algorithms
  are used.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First Results from a Novel Magnetograph (SHAZAM)
Authors: DeForest, Craig; Rimmele, T.; Berger, T.; Peterson, J.
2009SPD....40.3301D    Altcode:
  The magnetic energy flux through the Sun's surface is dominated by small
  features at all currently observable spatial scales; hence there is a
  strong need to improve the spatial resolution of magnetic measurements,
  which are increasingly photon starved as telescopes improve. The Solar
  High-speed Zeeman Magnetograph (SHAZAM) is a line-of-sight magnetograph
  based on the principle of spectral stereoscopy. It is designed to
  acquire magnetograms quickly enough to beat image fluctuations due
  to both solar evolution and terrestrial seeing, even on scales under
  100 km on the Sun. It is over 100x more photon efficient than existing
  quantitative magnetographs such as SOHO/MDI. We present first results
  from an observing run at the National Solar Observatory's Dunn Solar
  Telescope in May 2009, hopefully including near-diffraction-limited,
  time resolved magnetogram sequences with better than 150km resolution
  on the surface of the Sun.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Keil, Stephen L.; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Wagner, Jeremy
2009EM&P..104...77K    Altcode: 2008EM&P..tmp...37K
  High-resolution studies of the Sun’s magnetic fields are needed for a
  better understanding of the fundamental processes responsible for solar
  variability. The generation of magnetic fields through dynamo processes,
  the amplification of fields through the interaction with plasma flows,
  and the destruction of fields are poorly understood. There is incomplete
  insight into physical mechanisms responsible for chromospheric and
  coronal structure and heating, causes of variations in the radiative
  output of the Sun, and mechanisms that trigger flares and coronal mass
  ejections. Progress in answering these critical questions requires
  study of the interaction of the magnetic field and convection
  with a resolution sufficient to observe scale fundamental to these
  processes. The planned 4 m aperture ATST will be a unique scientific
  tool, with excellent angular resolution, a large wavelength range,
  and low scattered light. With its integrated adaptive optics, the
  ATST will achieve a spatial resolution nearly 10 times better than
  any existing solar telescope. The ATST design and development phase
  began in 2001 and it is now ready to begin construction in 2009.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Generation, Evolution and Destruction of Solar Magnetic Fields
Authors: Keil, Stephen; Rimmele, Thomas; DeForest, Craig
2009astro2010S.153K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Status of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Keil, S.; Wagner, J.; Atst Team
2008ESPM...12..6.2R    Altcode:
  The 4m ATST is scheduled to be commissioned within the next decade
  and will replace current major NSO facilities with the most powerful
  solar telescope and the world's leading resource for studying solar
  magnetism that controls the solar wind, flares, coronal mass ejections
  and variability in the Sun's output. As its highest priority science
  driver ATST shall provide high resolution and high sensitivity
  observations of the highly dynamic solar magnetic fields throughout
  the solar atmosphere, including the corona. After a brief overview of
  the science goals and unique observational capabilities of the ATST
  a summary of the design of the telescope and its powerful first-light
  instrumentation as well as the project status will be given.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Assessment of local seeing within a telescope lab environment
Authors: Biérent, Rudolph; Rimmele, Thomas; Marino, Jose
2008SPIE.7012E..34B    Altcode: 2008SPIE.7012E.107B
  Turbulence, which may exist along an optical path inside a telescope
  or laboratory setup such as the Dunn Solar Telescope observing room,
  can negatively impact the imaging performance at the final detector
  plane. In order to derive requirements and error budget terms for the
  Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) we performed interferometric
  measurements with the goal to determine the amount of aberrations
  introduced by the air mass through which the beam propagates and
  characterize temporal and spatial frequencies of these aberrations. We
  used a He-Ne laser interferometer to measure aberrations along a 50m
  and 33m, collimated 150mm diameter laser beam. The experiments were
  performed with both vertical and horizontal beam propagation. We
  investigated the impact on the amount of self-induced turbulence of
  the difference in temperature between the top and the bottom of the
  optical laboratory, the impact of heat sources, such as electronics
  racks, and the effect of a laminar air flow applied to parts of the
  beam path. The analysis of the interferograms yields values of the rms
  wave front aberrations excluding tip/tilt in the range of 1.45nm/m -
  2nm/m (@632nm) for the vertical beam propagation and between 0.8nm/m -
  1.6nm/m for the horizontal beam. The spatial spectrum of the turbulence
  tends to decay faster than Kolmogorov turbulence. This is true, in
  particular, for the horizontal beam path. The temporal frequencies
  are on the order of a few Hz (&lt;10Hz).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The unique scientific capabilities of the Advanced Technology
    Solar Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; ATST Team
2008AdSpR..42...78R    Altcode:
  The 4 m Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be the most
  powerful solar telescope and the world's leading resource for studying
  solar magnetism that controls the solar wind, flares, coronal mass
  ejections and variability in the Sun's output. We provide an overview of
  the science goals and observational requirements of the ATST and a brief
  summary of the design status of the telescope and its instrumentation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Wavefront measurement error in a Hartmann-Shack-type wavefront
    sensor due to field anisoplanatism
Authors: Wöger, Friedrich; Rimmele, Thomas
2008SPIE.7015E..4XW    Altcode: 2008SPIE.7015E.133W
  We investigate the effect of atmospheric phase and scintillation
  anisoplanatism on the measurement of the local gradient of the wavefront
  using a Hartmann-Shack type wavefront sensor. This is accomplished
  by simulation of the imaging process, starting with 100 synthetic,
  anisoplanatic phase and scintillation screens that were computed for
  several viewing angles and that correspond to Fried parameters of 7
  and 12 cm. The screens are calculated using the approximated turbulence
  profile at the site selected for the ATST, Haleakala on Maui, Hawaii,
  USA. Phase aberrations are propagated through the wavefront sensor,
  considering each viewing angle in each subaperture (of adjustable
  size) separately. The point spread functions (PSF) are calculated for
  the viewing directions as well as specified (and adjustable) pixel
  scale in the sensor camera. Subsequently, these PSFs are convolved
  with a typical wavefront sensor lock structure of solar AO systems,
  an image of solar granulation. The cross-correlation peak of the
  thus created anisoplanatic subimages is finally used to find the
  local gradients of the wavefront. We find that phase anisoplanatism
  contributes significantly to the measurement error of a Hartmann-Shack
  type wavefront sensor, whereas we cannot detect a notable increase
  thereof from scintillation anisoplanatism in the subaperture when
  using a cross-correlating algorithm to find the gradient of the
  incident wavefront.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Advanced Technology Solar Telescope: a progress report
Authors: Wagner, J.; Rimmele, T. R.; Keil, S.; Hubbard, R.; Hansen,
   E.; Phelps, L.; Warner, M.; Goodrich, B.; Richards, K.; Hegwer, S.;
   Kneale, R.; Ditsler, J.
2008SPIE.7012E..0IW    Altcode: 2008SPIE.7012E..16W
  The four-meter Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be the
  most powerful solar telescope and the world's leading resource for
  studying solar magnetism that controls the solar wind, flares, coronal
  mass ejections and variability in the Sun's output. Development of a
  four-meter solar telescope presents many technical challenges (e.g.,
  thermal control of the enclosure, telescope structure and optics). We
  give a status report of the ATST project (e.g., system design reviews,
  PDR, Haleakalä site environmental impact statement progress) and
  summarize the design of the major subsystems, including the telescope
  mount assembly, enclosure, mirror assemblies, wavefront correction,
  and instrumentation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High resolution observations using adaptive optics:
    Achievements and future needs
Authors: Sankarasubramanian, K.; Rimmele, T.
2008JApA...29..329S    Altcode: 2008arXiv0801.3125S
  Over the last few years, several interesting observations were
  obtained with the help of solar Adaptive Optics (AO). In this paper,
  few observations made using the solar AO are enlightened and briefly
  discussed. A list of disadvantages with the current AO system are
  presented. With telescopes larger than 1.5 m expected during the
  next decade, there is a need to develop the existing AO technologies
  for large aperture telescopes. Some aspects of this development are
  highlighted. Finally, the recent AO developments in India are also
  presented.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Chromospheric Dynamics: Onwards and Upwards
Authors: Cauzzi, G.; Reardon, K.; Rimmele, T.; Rutten, R.; Tritschler,
   A.; Uitenbroek, H.; Woeger, F.
2008AGUSMSP41B..03C    Altcode:
  We present a study of chromospheric dynamics and its relation with the
  driving photospheric magneto-convection in a variety of solar targets,
  from quiet Sun to more active regions. To this end high resolution
  observations were obtained in CaII 854.2 nm, Hα, and photospheric
  FeI lines with the Interferometric BIdimensional Spectrometer (IBIS)
  installed at the Dunn Solar Telescope of the NSO. The availability of
  full spectroscopic information on extended fields of view allows us
  to derive a comprehensive view of the intrinsically 3-D chromospheric
  scene. A coherent picture is emerging that involves the propagation
  and dissipation of photospheric acoustic waves into the chromospheric
  layers, but selected and guided by the local and highly variable
  magnetic topology. In particular, ubiquitous fibrilar structures,
  apparently originating from even the smallest magnetic elements,
  appear an integral part of the dynamic chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: WHI Targeted Campaigns on Coronal Holes and Quiet Sun: High
    Resolution Observations of the Lower Atmosphere With IBIS
Authors: Cauzzi, G.; Reardon, K. P.; Rimmele, T.; Tritschler, A.;
   Uitebroek, H.; Woeger, F.; Deforest, C.; McIntosh, S.
2008AGUSMSH51A..02C    Altcode:
  The Interferometric BIdimensional Spectrometer (IBIS) is a dual
  Fabry-Perot instrument installed at the Dunn Solar Telescope that allows
  two-dimensional spectroscopic observations in a variety of spectral
  lines. The IBIS/DST will participate in the WHI targeted campaigns
  on coronal holes (April 3-9) and quiet Sun dynamics (April 10-16)
  performing simultaneous high-resolution observations of the dynamics of
  the photosphere and chromosphere in the coordinated targets. The aim is
  to obtain insights on the role of the lower atmosphere's dynamics and
  energetics into the structuring of the coronal plasma and, possibly,
  into the origin of the solar wind. In this paper we will present the
  observations obtained as well as first results, and attempt to relate
  them with recent work performed on quiet Sun chromospheric dynamics.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Facility IR Spectropolarimeter for the Dunn Solar Telescope
Authors: Jaeggli, S. A.; Lin, H.; Mickey, D. L.; Kuhn, J. R.; Hegwer,
   S. L.; Rimmele, T. R.; Penn, M. J.
2008AGUSMSH31A..11J    Altcode:
  The Facility IR Spectropolarimeter(FIRS) is a multi-slit
  spectropolarimeter designed for the Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) at the
  National Solar Observatory on Sacramento Peak (NSO/SP) in New Mexico to
  study magnetism on the solar surface. The instrument samples adjacent
  slices of the solar surface using four parallel slits to achieve high
  cadence, diffraction-limited, precision imaging-spectropolarimetry. Due
  to the versatile, multi-armed design of the spectrograph, up to
  four spectral lines at visible and infrared wavelengths, covering
  four different heights in the solar atmosphere, can be observed
  simultaneously. In this poster-paper we will describe the design,
  capabilities, and performance of the instrument.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The solar chromosphere at high resolution with IBIS. I. New
    insights from the Ca II 854.2 nm line
Authors: Cauzzi, G.; Reardon, K. P.; Uitenbroek, H.; Cavallini, F.;
   Falchi, A.; Falciani, R.; Janssen, K.; Rimmele, T.; Vecchio, A.;
   Wöger, F.
2008A&A...480..515C    Altcode: 2007arXiv0709.2417C
  Context: The chromosphere remains a poorly understood part of the solar
  atmosphere, as current modeling and observing capabilities are still
  ill-suited to investigating its fully 3-dimensional nature in depth. In
  particular, chromospheric observations that can preserve high spatial
  and temporal resolution while providing spectral information over
  extended fields of view are still very scarce. <BR />Aims: In this
  paper, we seek to establish the suitability of imaging spectroscopy
  performed in the Ca II 854.2 nm line as a means of investigating
  the solar chromosphere at high resolution. <BR />Methods: We utilize
  monochromatic images obtained with the Interferometric BIdimensional
  Spectrometer (IBIS) at multiple wavelengths within the Ca II 854.2 nm
  line and over several quiet areas. We analyze both the morphological
  properties derived from narrow-band monochromatic images and the
  average spectral properties of distinct solar features such as network
  points, internetwork areas, and fibrils. <BR />Results: The spectral
  properties derived over quiet-Sun targets are in full agreement with
  earlier results obtained with fixed-slit spectrographic observations,
  highlighting the reliability of the spectral information obtained
  with IBIS. Furthermore, the very narrowband IBIS imaging reveals very
  clearly the dual nature of the Ca II 854.2 nm line. Its outer wings
  gradually sample the solar photosphere, while the core is a purely
  chromospheric indicator. The latter displays a wealth of fine structures
  including bright points akin to the Ca II H{2V} and K{2V} grains, and
  as fibrils originating from even the smallest magnetic elements. The
  fibrils occupy a large fraction of the observed field of view, even
  in the quiet regions, and clearly outline atmospheric volumes with
  different dynamical properties, strongly dependent on the local magnetic
  topology. This highlights how 1D models stratified along the vertical
  direction can provide only a very limited representation of the actual
  chromospheric physics. <BR />Conclusions: Imaging spectroscopy in the
  Ca II 854.2 nm line currently represents one of the best observational
  tools for investigating the highly structured and highly dynamical
  chromospheric environment. A high-performance instrument such as IBIS
  is crucial in achieving the necessary spectral purity and stability,
  spatial resolution, and temporal cadence. <P />Two movies are only
  available in electronic form at http://www.aanda.org

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the Relation between Umbral Dots, Dark-cored Filaments,
    and Light Bridges
Authors: Rimmele, T.
2008ApJ...672..684R    Altcode:
  We present high-resolution observations of the complex active region AR
  0484 observed close to disk center with the Dunn Solar Telescope. The
  field of view (FOV) contains several interesting features, including a
  number of umbral fragments, light bridges of varying width, umbral dots,
  and dark-cored penumbral filaments. A time sequence of reconstructed
  G-band images and adaptive optics-corrected UBF filtergrams was analyzed
  with the goal of comparing observations with recent simulations and
  models of sunspot fine structure. In an umbral fragment in which the
  field strength is relatively weak, we find a large number of umbral
  dots. We were able to resolve dark substructure within bright umbral
  dots that in some cases resembles the dark lanes recently predicted
  by magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations. Umbral dot substructure
  is also clearly revealed in images of spectral line parameters. We
  compare line parameters for dark-cored penumbral filaments, dark lanes
  observed in light bridges, and the dark umbral dot substructure. We
  find evidence that all of these structures are elevated above the
  formation height of the continuum. We observe dynamic proper motion of
  umbral dots, including motion along a narrow lane that occurs within
  an umbral fragment and shows similarity to the proper motion observed
  in narrow light bridges. Furthermore, we study the temporal variation
  of spectral line parameters such as the integrated line absorption of
  the temperature-sensitive Fe I λ5434 line. The computed power maps
  show features closely related to sunspot fine structure.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics at the Dunn Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Hegwer, S.; Richards, K.; Woeger, F.
2008amos.confE..18R    Altcode:
  Solar adaptive optics has become an indispensable tool at ground
  based solar telescopes. Driven by the quest for ever higher spatial
  resolution observations of the Sun solar adaptive optics are now
  operated routinely at major ground based solar telescopes. The current
  high-resolution solar telescopes, such as the Dunn Solar Telescope
  (DST), are in the one-meter class and utilize AO for &gt;95 % of
  the observing time to achieve the diffraction limit at visible and
  NIR wavelengths. Solar AO [1,2] has revitalized ground-based solar
  astronomy at existing telescopes. The development of high-order solar
  AO that is capable of delivering high Strehl in the visible will
  be absolutely essential for next generation solar telescopes, such
  as the 4m aperture Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST), which
  undoubtedly will revolutionize solar astronomy [3]. Solar observations
  are performed over an extended field of view. The limited size of
  the isoplanatic patch, over which conventional adaptive optics (AO)
  provides diffraction limited resolution is a severe limitation. Solar
  science would benefit greatly from AO correction over large field of
  views. A single sunspot typically has a size of about 30 arcsec; large
  active regions often cover a field of 2-3 arcmin. Figure 1 shows an
  image of solar granulation and embedded magnetic g-band bright points
  observed near the limb of the sun. The field of view is approximately
  120"x 80". This diffraction limited image was recorded at the Dunn
  Solar Telescope with high order adaptive optics and post-processed
  using speckle interferometry. Post-processing is required to achieve the
  uniform, diffraction limited imaging over such an extended FOV. However,
  speckle interferometry as well as other post facto restoration methods
  typically rely on short exposure imaging, which in most cases can not be
  deployed when quantitative spectroscopy and polarimetry is performed,
  i.e., long exposures are required. Multi-conjugate adaptive optics
  (MCAO) is a technique that provides real-time diffraction limited
  imaging over an extended FOV [4]. The development of MCAO for existing
  solar telescopes and, in particular, for the next generation large
  aperture solar telescopes is thus a top priority. The Sun is an ideal
  object for the development of MCAO since solar structure provides
  "multiple guide stars" in any desired configuration. It is therefore
  not surprising that the first successful on-the-sky MCAO experiments
  were performed at the Dunn Solar Telescope and at a solar telescope
  on the Canary Islands. However, further development is needed before
  operational solar MCAO can be implemented at future large aperture
  solar telescopes such as the ATST on Haleakala [5]. MCAO development
  must progress beyond these initial proof-of-concept experiments and
  should include laboratory experiments and on-sky demonstrations under
  controlled or well characterized conditions as well as quantitative
  performance analysis and comparison to model predictions. At the DST we
  recently implemented a dedicated MCAO bench with the goal of developing
  well-characterized, operational MCAO. The MCAO system uses 2 deformable
  mirrors conjugated to the telescope entrance pupil and a layer in the
  upper atmosphere, respectively. DM2 can be placed at conjugates ranging
  from 2 km to 10 km altitude. For our initial experiments we have used
  a staged approach in which the 97 actuator, 76 subaperture correlating
  Shack-Hartmann solar adaptive optics system normally operated at the DST
  is followed by the second DM and the tomographic wavefront sensor, which
  uses three "solar guide stars". We use modal reconstruction algorithms
  for both DMs. We have successfully and stably locked the MCAO system on
  artificial objects (slides), for which 1 The National Solar Observatory
  is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy
  under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation,
  for the benefit of the astronomical community turbulence screens are
  generated directly in front of the DMs, as well as solar structure. We
  varied the height of the upper conjugate between 2 km and 7 km. We
  recorded strictly simultaneous images after the pupil DM and after
  the upper layer DM. Comparing these images allows us to evaluate the
  performance of the MCAO stage and directly compare to the conventional
  AO. In addition we recorded wavefront sensor telemetry data for closed
  and open loop. We present preliminary results and discuss future plans.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Real-time processing for the ATST AO system
Authors: Richards, K.; Rimmele, T.
2008amos.confE..26R    Altcode:
  The real-time processing requirements for the four meter Advanced
  Technology Solar Telescope extended source high order adaptive
  optics system will be approximately 15 times that of the Dunn Solar
  Telescope AO systems on which the ATST AO system is based. The ATST AO,
  with its approximately 1232 subapertures, will use massively parallel
  processing and is based on Analog Devices TigerSHARC DSPs as the central
  processing units. We will discuss the requirements for processing and
  data handling and the architecture of the correlating Shack-Hartmannn
  and reconstructor processing unit and present the results of bench-mark
  testing of the DSP hardware that was selected for the ATST AO system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Discrepancy in G-Band Contrast: Where is the Quiet Sun?
Authors: Uitenbroek, H.; Tritschler, A.; Rimmele, T.
2007ApJ...668..586U    Altcode: 2007arXiv0704.3637U
  We compare the rms contrast in observed speckle reconstructed G-band
  images with synthetic filtergrams computed from two magnetohydrodynamic
  simulation snapshots. The observations consist of 103 bursts of 80
  frames each, taken at the Dunn Solar Telescope (DST), sampled at twice
  the diffraction limit of the telescope. The speckle reconstructions
  account for the actions of the adaptive optics (AO) system at the DST in
  order to supply reliable photometry. We find a considerable discrepancy
  between the observed rms contrast of 14.1% for the best reconstructed
  images and the synthetic rms contrast of 21.5% in a simulation snapshot
  thought to be representative of the quiet Sun. The areas of features
  in the synthetic filtergrams that have positive or negative contrast
  beyond the minimum and maximum values in the reconstructed images have
  spatial scales that should be resolved. This leads us to conclude that
  there are fundamental differences in the rms G-band contrast between
  observed and computed filtergrams. On the basis of the substantially
  reduced granular contrast of 16.3% in the synthetic plage filtergram,
  we speculate that the quiet Sun may contain more weak magnetic field
  than previously thought.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Diffraction-limited Spectropolarimetry At The Dunn Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Tritschler, Alexandra; Sankarasubramanian, K.; Rimmele, T.;
   Gullixson, C.; Fletcher, S.
2007AAS...210.2603T    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39R.323T
  The combination of high spectral and angular resolution is of vital
  importance for an accurate characterization of the magnetic field
  vector and the thermal and kinematic conditions in the magnetized
  atmosphere utilizing inverion techniques. The Diffraction-Limited
  Spectro-Polarimeter (DLSP) operated at the NSO Dunn Solar Telescope
  is an innovative grating polarimeter specifically designed to meet the
  high requirements pursued in solar spectropolarimetry. To demonstrate
  the scientific potential of observations obtained with the DLSP and
  its support devices we present an overview of questions that have been
  recently addressed with the DLSP. Furthermore, we discuss the latest
  modifications related to instrument control and data acquisition
  pipeline implemented to improve its performance and pave the way to
  the realm of queque observing at the DST in preparation for ATST.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On The Relation Between Umbral Dots, Dark-cored Filaments
    And Light Bridges
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.
2007AAS...21012002R    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..245R
  We present high resolution observations of the complex active region
  AR0484 observed close to disk center at the Dunn Solar Telescope. The
  field of view contains several interesting features including a number
  of umbral fragments, light bridges of varying width, umbral dots and
  dark-cored penumbral filaments. A time sequence of reconstructed g-band
  images and adaptive optics corrected UBF filtergrams were analyzed
  with the goal to compare observations with recent model predictions for
  sunspot fine-structure. In an umbral fragment where the field strength
  is relatively weak we find a large number of umbral dots. We were able
  to resolve substructure within umbral dots that in some cases resembles
  the dark lanes recently predicted by MHD simulations by Schuessler
  and Voegler 2006. Umbral dot substructure is also clearly revealed
  in images of spectral line parameters. We compare line parameters for
  dark-cored penumbral filaments, dark lanes observed in light bridges
  and the umbral dot substructure. We observe dynamic proper motion of
  umbral dots, including motion along a narrow lane that occurs within
  an umbral fragment and shows similarity to the proper motion observed
  in narrow light bridges. Furthermore, we study the temporal variation
  of spectral line parameters such as the integrated line absorption of
  the temperature sensitive FeI 5434 A line.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Long Exposure Point Spread Function Estimation Adaptive Optics
Loop Data: Results and Validation
Authors: Marino, Jose; Rimmele, T.
2007AAS...210.2601M    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..134M
  Current work in Solar Physics requires high resolution observations
  from ground based telescopes. However, the performance of any ground
  based telescope is ultimately limited by optical aberrations produced
  by atmospheric turbulence. Adaptive Optics (AO) is a powerful tool that
  aims to correct these aberrations in real time considerably improving
  image quality. <P />We present a method to estimate the long exposure
  PSF of the AO corrected solar image using AO loop data. Wavefront sensor
  and mirror data produced by the AO system during normal operation
  contain information about uncorrected residuals aberrations that
  define the shape of the long exposure point spread function (PSF). The
  estimated long exposure PSF is used to improve image quality through
  post-processing techniques. Post-processed images produce more reliable
  quantitative measurements of physical parameters. <P />Results obtained
  by applying the method to actual solar and star observations captured at
  the Dunn Solar Telescope will be shown. The accuracy of the estimated
  PSFs is tested with observations of the star Sirius which produce a
  direct measurement of the system's PSF.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Acoustic Shocks in the Quiet Solar Chromosphere
Authors: Cauzzi, G.; Reardon, K. P.; Vecchio, A.; Janssen, K.;
   Rimmele, T.
2007ASPC..368..127C    Altcode:
  We exploit the two-dimensional spectroscopic capabilities of the
  Interferometric BIdimensional Spectrometer (IBIS) to study the
  chromospheric Ca II 854.2 nm line and its temporal evolution in a quiet
  region at the center of the solar disk. The Ca II 854.2 profiles in the
  internetwork portion of the field of view clearly indicate the presence
  of hydrodynamic shocks, occurring at frequencies above the acoustic
  cut-off. <P />The location and strength of such shocks perfectly map
  the areas where large velocity power is found at frequencies of 5.5-8
  mHz in a standard Fourier analysis. The shocks locations evidence a
  sharp partition of the quiet area in regions of very distinct dynamical
  behavior, highlighting the role of the local magnetic topology in
  structuring the lower chromosphere. The portions of the field of view
  where the photospheric field is very weak, and that are presumably
  connected to distant magnetic structures (or open to the interplanetary
  field), are the site of frequent shock occurrence. On the contrary, in
  regions neighboring the magnetic network and harboring a more horizontal
  configuration of the chromospheric magnetic field, shocks are heavily
  suppressed, even if the photospheric field is essentially absent in
  these areas as well. These latter regions, with much reduced velocity
  power at frequencies of 5.5-8 mHz \citep[the “magnetic shadows” first
  described in][]{gc-judge_01}, are spatially coincident with fibrilar
  structures visible in the Ca II 854.2 line core intensity maps. <P />We
  finally argue that areas within and immediately surrounding the magnetic
  network also display evidence of chromospheric shocks, but occurring at
  periodicities of 4-6 minutes. Such slow shocks are stronger than those
  occurring in field-free areas, as evidenced by the strong emission
  in the inner blue-wing of the line. This is in agreement with recent
  results claiming that magneto-acoustic shocks can develop in inclined
  magnetic structures, acting as `portals' through which the powerful
  low-frequency photospheric oscillations can leak into the chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: What Makes The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST)
    So Advanced?
Authors: Kuhn, Jeffrey R.; Rimmele, T.; ATST Design Team
2007AAS...210.6701K    Altcode: 2007BAAS...39..175K
  -- Its the science! While its true that we haven't advanced ground-based
  solar astronomy by a leap as big as this since Galileo, its the
  qualitatively new insights that we expect with ATST that drive its
  design. ATST isn't so much a telescope as much as it is a sensitive
  magnetometer, and a high dynamic range imaging spectropolarimeter. In
  this talk we'll try to draw the lines between the questions you've
  always wanted to ask about the Sun, and this unique optical and
  infrared instrument.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Comparison of Ca II K and Ca II 8542 Å Images
Authors: Reardon, K. P.; Cauzzi, G.; Rimmele, T.
2007ASPC..368..151R    Altcode:
  We compare a time sequence of filtergrams obtained in the Ca II K line
  with a series of spectrally resolved images obtained simultaneously
  with the IBIS instrument in the Ca II 8542 Å line. Using the
  narrowband IBIS images and a synthetic filter profile, we construct
  simulated 8542 filtergrams that mimic the observed K<SUB>2V</SUB>
  filtergrams. We observe that these filtergrams appear to contain
  elements corresponding to both photospheric and chromospheric
  structures. Intermediate scale patterns seen in the filtergrams may
  simply be the result of the combination of a variety of structures
  from different atmospheric levels. We analyze the Fourier power
  spectra of the filtergrams and note that at frequencies well above
  the acoustic cut-off value the observed power in the K<SUB>2V</SUB>
  filtergrams seems to be predominantly photospheric in origin. The use
  of Ca II H and K filtergrams to study the chromospheric behavior thus
  may be inherently problematic. Narrowband images in the Ca II 8542 Å
  line might provide a better source of information about chromospheric
  behavior with little loss in spatial or temporal resolution.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Detection of opposite polarities in a sunspot light bridge:
    evidence of low-altitude magnetic reconnection
Authors: Bharti, Lokesh; Rimmele, Thomas; Jain, Rajmal; Jaaffrey,
   S. N. A.; Smartt, R. N.
2007MNRAS.376.1291B    Altcode: 2007astro.ph..1674B; 2007MNRAS.tmp..160B
  A multiwavelength photometric analysis was performed in order to study
  the sub-structure of a sunspot light bridge in the photosphere and
  the chromosphere. Active region NOAA 8350 was observed on 1998 October
  8. The data consist of a 100 min time series of 2D spectral scans of
  the lines FeI 5576 Å, Hα 6563 Å, FeI 6302.5 Å, and continuum images
  at 5571 Å. We recorded line-of-sight magnetograms in 6302.5 Å. The
  observations were taken at the Dunn Solar Telescope at US National Solar
  Observatory, Sacramento Peak. We find evidence for plasma ejection
  from a light bridge followed by Ellerman bombs. Magnetograms of the
  same region reveal opposite polarity in light bridge with respect to
  the umbra. These facts support the notion that low-altitude magnetic
  reconnection can result in the magnetic cancellation as observed in
  the photosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Field-Dependent Adaptive Optics Correction Derived with the
    Spectral Ratio Technique
Authors: Denker, C.; Deng, N.; Rimmele, T. R.; Tritschler, A.;
   Verdoni, A.
2007SoPh..241..411D    Altcode:
  In this empirical study, we compare high-resolution observations
  obtained with the 65-cm vacuum reflector at Big Bear Solar Observatory
  (BBSO) in 2005 and with the Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) at the National
  Solar Observatory/Sacramento Peak (NSO/SP) in 2006. We measure the
  correction of the high-order adaptive optics (AO) systems across
  the field of view (FOV) using the spectral ratio technique, which
  is commonly employed in speckle masking imaging, and differential
  image motion measurements. The AO correction is typically much larger
  (10<SUP>”</SUP> to 25<SUP>”</SUP>) than the isoplanatic angle and
  can be described by a radially symmetric function with a central core
  and extended wings. The full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) of the core
  represents a measure of the AO correction. The average FWHM values
  for BBSO and NSO/SP are 23.5<SUP>”</SUP> and 18.2<SUP>”</SUP>,
  respectively. The extended wings of the function show that the
  AO systems still contribute to an improved speckle reconstruction
  at the periphery of the 80<SUP>”</SUP>×80<SUP>”</SUP> FOV. The
  major differences in the level of AO correction between BBSO and
  NSO/SP can be explained by different contributions of ground-layer-
  and free-atmosphere-dominated seeing, as well as different FOVs of
  the wavefront sensors. In addition, we find an anisotropic spectral
  ratio in sunspot penumbrae caused by the quasi-one-dimensional nature
  of penumbral filaments, which introduces a significant error in the
  estimation of the Fourier amplitudes during the image restoration
  process.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Adaptive Optics at the Big Bear Solar Observatory: Instrument
    Description and First Observations
Authors: Denker, Carsten; Tritschler, Alexandra; Rimmele, Thomas R.;
   Richards, Kit; Hegwer, Steve L.; Wöger, Friedrich
2007PASP..119..170D    Altcode:
  In 2004 January, the Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO) was equipped with
  a high-order adaptive optics (AO) system built in collaboration with
  the National Solar Observatory (NSO) at Sacramento Peak. The hardware is
  almost identical to the AO system operated at the NSO Dunn Solar Tower
  (DST), incorporating a 97 actuator deformable mirror, a Shack-Hartmann
  wave-front sensor with 76 subapertures, and an off-the-shelf digital
  signal processor system. However, the BBSO optical design is quite
  different. It had to be adapted to the 65 cm vacuum reflector and
  the downstream postfocus instrumentation. In this paper, we describe
  the optical design, demonstrate the AO performance, and use image
  restoration techniques to illustrate the image quality that can be
  achieved with the new AO system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar atmospheric oscillations and the chromospheric magnetic
    topology
Authors: Vecchio, A.; Cauzzi, G.; Reardon, K. P.; Janssen, K.;
   Rimmele, T.
2007A&A...461L...1V    Altcode: 2006astro.ph.11206V
  Aims:We investigate the oscillatory properties of the quiet solar
  chromosphere in relation to the underlying photosphere, with particular
  regard to the effects of the magnetic topology. <BR />Methods: For the
  first time we perform a Fourier analysis on a sequence of line-of-sight
  velocities measured simultaneously in a photospheric (Fe I 709.0 nm)
  and a chromospheric line (Ca II 854.2 nm). The velocities were obtained
  from full spectroscopic data acquired at high spatial resolution with
  the Interferometric BIdimensional Spectrometer (IBIS). The field of
  view encompasses a full supergranular cell, allowing us to discriminate
  between areas with different magnetic characteristics. <BR />Results: We
  show that waves with frequencies above the acoustic cut-off propagate
  from the photosphere to upper layers only in restricted areas of
  the quiet Sun. A large fraction of the quiet chromosphere is in fact
  occupied by “magnetic shadows”, surrounding network regions, that
  we identify as originating from fibril-like structures observed in
  the core intensity of the Ca II line. We show that a large fraction
  of the chromospheric acoustic power at frequencies below the acoustic
  cut-off, residing in the proximity of the magnetic network elements,
  directly propagates from the underlying photosphere. This supports
  recent results arguing that network magnetic elements can channel
  low-frequency photospheric oscillations into the chromosphere, thus
  providing a way to input mechanical energy in the upper layers.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ground-based solar facilities in the U.S.A.
Authors: Denker, C.; Gary, D. E.; Rimmele, T. R.
2007msfa.conf...31D    Altcode:
  In this review, we present the status of new ground-based facilities
  for optical and radio observations of the Sun in the United States. The
  4-meter aperture Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) under the
  stewardship of the National Solar Observatory (NSO) has successfully
  completed its design phase and awaits funding approval. The 1.6-meter
  aperture New Solar Telescope (NST) at Big Bear Solar Observatory
  (BBSO) is currently under construction. Complementing these optical
  telescopes is the Frequency Agile Solar Radiotelescope (FASR)
  an instrument for dynamic broadband imaging spectroscopy covering
  a multitude of radio frequencies from 50 MHz to 20 GHz. Imaging
  spectroscopy and polarimetry are common features of these telescopes,
  which will provide new insight regarding the evolution and nature of
  solar magnetic fields. High-resolution observations of solar activity,
  bridging the solar atmosphere from the photosphere to the corona, will
  be obtained with a dedicated suite of instruments. Special emphasis
  of this review will be put on the interplay between instrumentation
  and scientific discovery.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multiwavelength Study of Flow Fields in Flaring Super Active
    Region NOAA 10486
Authors: Deng, N.; Xu, Y.; Yang, G.; Cao, W.; Liu, C.; Rimmele, T. R.;
   Wang, H.; Denker, C.
2006AGUFMSH31B..06D    Altcode:
  We present high resolution observations of horizontal flow fields
  measured by Local Correlation Tracking from intensity images in three
  wavelengths, i.e., G-Band (GB), White-Light (WL), and Near InfraRed
  (NIR). The observations were obtained on 2003 October~29 within
  the flaring super active region NOAA~10486, which was the source of
  several X-class flares, including an X10 flare that occurred near
  the end of the observing run. The data were obtained at National
  Solar Observatory/Sacramento Peak (NSO/SP) using the newly developed
  high-order Adaptive Optics (AO) system. We also use Dopplergrams
  and magnetograms from MDI on board SOHO to study the line-of-sight
  flow and magnetic field. We observe persistent and long-lived (at
  least 5 hours) strong horizontal and vertical shear flows (both in
  the order of 1 km s-1) along the magnetic Neutral Line (NL) until
  the X10 flare occurred. From lower photospheric level (NIR), the
  direction of the flows does not change up to the upper photosphere
  (GB), while the flow speeds in the shear motion regions decrease and
  on the contrary those in regions without shear motions increase with
  increasing altitude. Right after the X10 flare, the magnetic gradient
  decreased, while both horizontal and vertical shear flows dramatically
  enhanced near the flaring NL. Our results suggest that photospheric
  shear flows and local magnetic shear near the NL can increase after
  the flare, which may be the result of shear release in the overlying
  large-scale magnetic system or the reflection of a twisted or sheared
  flux emergence carrying enough energy from subphotosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Diffraction Limited Spectro-Polarimeter
Authors: Sankarasubramanian, K.; Lites, B.; Gullixson, C.; Elmore,
   D.; Hegwer, S.; Streander, K.; Rimmele, T.; Fletcher, S.; Gregory,
   S.; Sigwarth, M.
2006ASPC..358..201S    Altcode:
  The Diffraction Limited Spectro-Polarimeter (DLSP) is a
  collaboration between the National Solar Observatory (NSO) and the
  High Altitude Observatory (HAO) <P />to provide a stable instrument
  for precision measurements of solar vector magnetic fields at high
  angular resolution. The DLSP is integrated with the new high-order
  Adaptive Optics (HOAO) system at the Dunn Solar Telescope (DST)
  and provides Stokes spectra of the Fe I 630 nm lines approaching the
  0.2 arcs3c diffraction limit of the DST. It is configured as a fixed,
  well-calibrated instrument that may be used simultaneously with G-band
  (1 nm bandpass) and a Ca K imagers (0.1 nm bandpass). The 2K×2K G-band
  imager allows fast frame selection and includes a burst mode for speckle
  imaging. The setup of DLSP and its imagers require only about 10 min of
  preparation before start of observations. This fixed setup facilitates
  standardized data reduction. The DLSP permits observations with 0.09
  arcsec sampling in high resolution mode. In wide-field mode, the 0.27
  arcsec sampling allows one to map regions about 3 arcmin on a side. The
  achieved continuum S/N is 500 (1500) in high resolution (wide-field)
  mode for a 4 s integration. It is possible to achieve higher S/N by
  integrating longer. Data reduction routines are now available in IDL
  for post-observation processing, and parallel analysis routines in
  FORTRAN 77 are being developed to allow “on-the-fly” data reduction
  and inversion.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Intensity and Velocity Oscillations in Magnetic Flux
    Concentrations (P9)
Authors: Bharti, L.; Rimmele, Thomas
2006ihy..workE.101B    Altcode:
  We analyzed intensity and velocity oscillations in magnetic network
  using high-resolution 2D spectral scan images from Interferometric
  Bi- dimensional Spectrometer (IBIS). In photosphere, oscillations in
  intensity and velocity in 2-5.2 mHz band shows reduced amplitude while
  at higher frequencies 5.2-7.0 mHz and 7.3-25.8 mHz band oscillations
  amplitude enhance in line core intensity and shows reduced amplitude
  in line core velocity however in chromosphere the oscillations
  have different character, we found higher power in 2-5.2 mHz,
  5.2-7.0 mHz and 7.3-25.8 mHz band in core velocity compared to core
  intensity. Amplitude variation with height is also inferred from our
  analysis. These findings are manifestation of high frequencies halos
  around strong flux concentrations (pores) in intermediate field strength
  network and mode conversion of solar p-modes in magnetic fields.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Evershed Flow: Flow Geometry and Its Temporal Evolution
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Marino, J.
2006ApJ...646..593R    Altcode:
  A diffraction-limited 120 minute time sequence of Evershed flows along
  penumbral filaments was obtained using high-order adaptive optics
  in conjunction with postprocessing. We observe individual Evershed
  flow channels and study their evolution in time. The vast majority of
  flow channels originate in bright, inner footpoints of size 0.2"-0.4"
  with an upflow. The upflow turns into a horizontal outflow along a
  dark penumbral filament within fractions of 1" (300-500 km). The time
  sequence clearly shows that both (bright) upflow and (dark) horizontal
  flow move around and evolve as a unit, indicating that they are part of
  the same feature. The inner footpoints are brighter than the average
  quiet photosphere and move inward at 0.5-1 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>. Our
  observations provide strong evidence that penumbral grains are the
  inner footpoints of Evershed flows where a hot upflow occurs. We
  observe an Evershed flow channel as it appears to emerge near the
  outer penumbra and track the flow over a period of about 100 minutes
  as it moves toward the penumbra-umbra edge, where it disappeared. We
  observe a steep decline (&lt;=0.2") of the velocity at outer end of
  individual flow channels, even for flow channels that end well within
  the penumbra. This sharp outer edge of the flow channels is also
  observed to move inward toward the penumbra-umbra boundary. Flows in
  dark-cored penumbral filaments appear to be produced by the Evershed
  effect. We discuss our observational results in the context of models
  of the Evershed effect. Some aspects of our observations provide strong
  support for the moving tube model of the Evershed flow.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Progress with solar multi-conjugate adaptive optics at NSO
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas; Richards, Kit; Roche, Jacqueline; Hegwer,
   Steve; Tritschler, Alexandra
2006SPIE.6272E..06R    Altcode: 2006SPIE.6272E...5R
  We have implemented a MCAO experiment at the Dunn Solar Telescope. The
  MCAO system uses 2 deformable mirrors, one conjugated to the telescope
  entrance pupil and other one conjugated to a layer in the upper
  atmosphere. For our initial experiments we have used a staged approach
  in which the 97 actuator, 76 subaperture correlating Shack-Hartmann
  solar adaptive optics system normally operated at the DST is followed
  by the second DM and the tomographic wavefront sensor, which used three
  "solar guide stars". We have successfully and stably locked the MCAO
  system on solar structure. We varied the height of the upper conjugate
  between 3km and 9 km. A large number of images were recorded in order
  to evaluate the performance of the system. The data analysis is still
  ongoing. We present preliminary results and discuss future plans.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The wavefront correction system for the Advanced Technology
    Solar Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Richards, K.; Roche, J. M.; Hegwer, S. L.;
   Hubbard, R. P.; Hansen, E. R.; Goodrich, B.; Upton, R. S.
2006SPIE.6272E..12R    Altcode: 2006SPIE.6272E..33R
  An important part of a large solar telescope is the ability to correct,
  in real time, optical alignment errors caused by gravitational bending
  of the telescope structure and wavefront errors caused by atmospheric
  seeing. The National Solar Observatory is currently designing the 4
  meter Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST). The ATST wavefront
  correction system, described in this paper, will incorporate a number
  of interacting wavefront control systems to provide diffraction limited
  imaging performance. We will describe these systems and summarize the
  interaction between the various sub-systems and present results of
  performance modeling.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Long exposure point spread function estimation from adaptive
optics loop data: validation and results
Authors: Marino, Jose; Rimmele, Thomas; Christou, Julian
2006SPIE.6272E..3WM    Altcode: 2006SPIE.6272E.124M
  Adaptive Optics systems have revolutionized ground based astronomy by
  providing real time correction for atmospheric aberrations. However,
  due to limited temporal and spatial bandwidth the correction provided is
  not perfect. With knowledge of the Point Spread Function correction can
  be further improved. The lack of point sources in Solar observations
  makes a direct measurement of the PSF impossible. We present a
  method to obtain a PSF estimate from the Adaptive Optics system loop
  telemetry. Using this method we can obtain a PSF for each captured AO
  corrected image and correct each image individually. We applied this
  method to a long time series of Solar data obtaining satisfactory
  results. Also in an attempt to validate this method we successfully
  observed the star Sirius with the Dunn Solar Telescope. The AO corrected
  star images provide a direct measurement of the PSF that can be compared
  to our estimates obtained from the AO telemetry data.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-Resolution Studies of Complex Solar Active Regions
Authors: Deng, Na; Wang, H.; Liu, C.; Yang, G.; Xu, Y.; Tritschler,
   A.; Cao, W.; Rimmele, T. R.; Denker, C.
2006SPD....37.3401D    Altcode: 2006BAAS...38..258D
  Most Flares and CMEs occur or originate in solar active regions,
  typically in sunspots with complex magnetic fields such as
  delta-spots. Rapid and substantial changes of the sunspot structure have
  been discovered to be associated with flares/CMEs. Rapid penumbral decay
  and umbral enhancements are intensity changes, which are interpreted as
  signatures of magnetic reconnection during the flare. The magnetic field
  lines switch from an inclined to a more vertical orientation. Strong and
  long-lived shear flows near the flaring magnetic inversion line have
  been detected using Local Correlation Tracking (LCT) techniques based
  on multi-wavelength high resolution observations. A newly observed and
  important phenomenon is the increased local shear flow and magnetic
  shear right after the flare in spite of theoretical models requiring
  an overall decrease in the magnetic free energy. The emergence of a
  twisted or pre-sheared flux rope near the neutral line is a possible
  interpretation. Using high-order adaptive optics combined post-facto
  speckle masking image reconstruction, we can obtain time-series with
  highly improved image quality and spatial resolution in the order of
  0.14" or about 100 km on the solar surface. We combine the observed
  longitudinal Dopplergrams obtained with two-dimensional imaging
  spectrometer and transverse LCT flow maps derived from time-series
  of speckle reconstructed images to create real local 3D flow maps
  (view from above). Using these precise 3D flow maps observed in a
  typical sunspot in the course of its center to limb disc passage,
  we observe distinct division line between radially inward and outward
  flow in the penumbra and its evolution during the decaying phase of
  the sunspot. The inclination angles of penumbral flow channels are
  also calculated.Acknowledgments: This work is supported by NSF under
  grant ATM 03-42560, ATM 03-13591, ATM 02-36945, ATM 05-48952, and MRI
  AST 00-79482 and by NASA under grant NAG 5-13661.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Active optical alignment of the Advanced Technology Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Upton, Robert; Rimmele, Thomas; Hubbard, Robert
2006SPIE.6271E..0RU    Altcode: 2006SPIE.6271E..27U
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) is a complex off-axis
  Gregorian design to be used for solar astronomy. In order the counteract
  the effects of mirror and telescope structure flexure, the ATST requires
  an active optics alignment strategy. This paper presents an active
  optics alignment strategy that uses three wavefront sensors distributed
  in the ATST field-of-view to form a least-squares alignment solution
  with respect to RMS wavefront error. The least squares solution is
  realized by means of a damped least squares linear reconstructor. The
  results of optical modelling simulations are presented for the ATST
  degrees-of-freedom subject to random perturbations. Typical results
  include residual RMS wavefront errors less than 20 nm. The results
  quoted include up to 25 nm RMS wavefront sensor signal noise, random
  figure errors on the mirrors up to 500 nm amplitude, random decenter
  range up to 500 μm, and random tilts up to 10e - 03 degrees (36
  arc-secs) range.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Interferometric Bidimensional Spectrometer (IBIS)
Authors: Cauzzi, Gianna; Cavallini, F.; Reardon, K.; Berrilli, F.;
   Rimmele, T.; IBIS Team
2006SPD....37.0608C    Altcode: 2006BAAS...38..226C
  The Interferometric Bidimensional Spectrometer (IBIS) is an advanced
  instrument for imaging spectroscopy installed at the Dunn Solar
  Telescope at NSO/Sacramento Peak. The instrument has been constructed by
  a consortium of italian institutes and allows for observations of the
  photosphere and chromosphere at high spatial, spectral, and temporal
  resolution. Such observations are essential for performing spatial
  and spectral comparisons with numerical simulations. We will present
  some of the performance characteristics of the instrument and show some
  examples of the IBIS data. We will also show some initial results of the
  recently tested polarimetric mode. IBIS is available for community use
  as a facility instrument of NSO.IBIS has been funded by the Italian
  Research Ministry (MIUR), the Italian Institute for Astrophysics
  (INAF), and the Universities of Florence and Rome. Additional support
  is provided by the National Solar Observatory.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multiwavelength Study of Flow Fields in Flaring Super Active
    Region NOAA 10486
Authors: Deng, Na; Xu, Yan; Yang, Guo; Cao, Wenda; Liu, Chang; Rimmele,
   Thomas R.; Wang, Haimin; Denker, Carsten
2006ApJ...644.1278D    Altcode:
  We present high-resolution observations of horizontal flow fields
  measured by local correlation tracking from intensity images in three
  wavelengths, i.e., G band (GB), white light (WL), and near-infrared
  (NIR). The observations were obtained on 2003 October 29 within
  the flaring super active region NOAA 10486, which was the source of
  several X-class flares, including an X10 flare that occurred near
  the end of the observing run. The data were obtained at National
  Solar Observatory/Sacramento Peak (NSO/SP) using the newly developed
  high-order adaptive optics (AO) system. We also use Dopplergrams
  and magnetograms from MDI on board SOHO to study the line-of-sight
  flow and magnetic field. We observe persistent and long-lived (at
  least 5 hr) strong horizontal and vertical shear flows (both in the
  order of 1 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>) along the magnetic neutral line (NL)
  until the X10 flare occurred. From lower photospheric level (NIR),
  the direction of the flows does not change up to the upper photosphere
  (GB), while the flow speeds in the shear motion regions decrease and,
  on the contrary, those in regions without shear motions increase with
  increasing altitude. Right after the X10 flare, the magnetic gradient
  decreased, while both horizontal and vertical shear flows dramatically
  enhanced near the flaring NL. Our results suggest that photospheric
  shear flows and local magnetic shear near the NL can increase after
  the flare, which may be the result of shear release in the overlying
  large-scale magnetic system or the reflection of a twisted or sheared
  flux emergence carrying enough energy from the subphotosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Advanced Technology Solar Telescope: a progress report
Authors: Wagner, J.; Rimmele, T. R.; Keil, S.; Barr, J.; Dalrymple,
   N.; Ditsler, J.; Goodrich, B.; Hansen, E.; Hegwer, S.; Hill, F.;
   Hubbard, R.; Phelps, L.; Price, R.; Richards, K.; Warner, M.
2006SPIE.6267E..09W    Altcode: 2006SPIE.6267E...9W
  The four-meter Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be
  the most powerful solar telescope and the world's leading resource
  for studying solar magnetism that controls the solar wind, flares,
  coronal mass ejections and variability in the Sun's output. Development
  of a four-meter solar telescope presents many technical challenges
  (e.g., thermal control of the enclosure, telescope structure and
  optics). We give a status report of the ATST project (e.g., system
  design reviews, instrument PDR, Haleakala site environmental impact
  statement progress) and summarize the design of the major subsystems,
  including the telescope mount assembly, enclosure, mirror assemblies,
  wavefront correction, and instrumentation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Controlling wavefront distortions across a thermal boundary
Authors: Hubbard, Robert; Rimmele, Thomas; Schoening, William;
   Dalrymple, Nathan; Poczulp, Gary; Warner, Mark
2006SPIE.6267E..22H    Altcode: 2006SPIE.6267E..66H
  We present the details of an experimental apparatus built to explore
  wavefront distortion and its mitigation when an optical beam passes
  from one thermal environment into another. The experiment simulates
  a situation within the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST)
  baseline design where the beam travels from an ambient-temperature
  environment into a thermostatically controlled "room temperature"
  environment. We found that an 8°C temperature difference between the
  two environments introduces about 125 nm rms of wavefront distortion. A
  double air curtain (one on each side of the boundary) reduces this to
  about 30 nm rms. We also showed that the high-order (&gt;1300 DoF)
  adaptive optics system which is integral to the ATST design will be
  able to further reduce this to about 5 nm rms, well within our initial
  error budget.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Site testing for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Hill, F.; Beckers, J.; Brandt, P.; Briggs, J.; Brown, T.;
   Brown, W.; Collados, M.; Denker, C.; Fletcher, S.; Hegwer, S.; Horst,
   T.; Komsa, M.; Kuhn, J.; Lecinski, A.; Lin, H.; Oncley, S.; Penn,
   M.; Radick, R.; Rimmele, T.; Socas-Navarro, H.; Streander, K.
2006SPIE.6267E..1TH    Altcode: 2006SPIE.6267E..59H
  The Advanced Solar Technology Telescope (ATST) is a 4-m solar telescope
  being designed for high spatial, spectral and temporal resolution,
  as well as IR and low-scattered light observations. The overall
  limit of performance of the telescope is strongly influenced by the
  qualities of the site at which it is located. Six sites were tested
  with a seeing monitor and a sky brightness instrument for 1.5 to 2
  years. The sites were Big Bear (California), Haleakala (Hawaii), La
  Palma (Canary Islands, Spain), Panguitch Lake (Utah), Sacramento Peak
  (New Mexico), and San Pedro Martir (Baja California, Mexico). In this
  paper we will describe the methods and results of the site survey,
  which chose Haleakala as the location of the ATST.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The unique scientific capabilities of the Advanced Technology
    Solar Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Keil, S.; Wagner, J.
2006cosp...36.3186R    Altcode: 2006cosp.meet.3186R
  The 4m Advance Technology Solar Telescope ATST will be the most powerful
  solar telescope and the world s leading resource for studying solar
  magnetism that controls the solar wind flares coronal mass ejections
  and variability in the Sun s output An overview of the science goals
  and observational requirements of the ATST and a brief summary of the
  design status of the telescope and its instrumentation will be given As
  its highest priority science driver ATST shall provide high resolution
  and high sensitivity observations of the highly dynamic solar magnetic
  fields throughout the solar atmosphere including the corona With its 4 m
  aperture ATST will resolve features at 0 03 20km on the sun at visible
  wavelengths The science requirement for polarimetric sensitivity 10 -5
  relative to intensity and accuracy 5 times 10 -4 relative to intensity
  place strong constraints on the polarization analysis and calibration
  units A high order adaptive optics system delivers a corrected beam
  to the initial set of state-of-the-art facility class instrumentation
  located in the Coude lab facility We will emphasize the science that
  the unique capabilities of the ground-based ATST will enable For
  example the prospect of highly sensitive polarimetric observations in
  the near-infrared and at longer infrared wavelengths at high spatial
  resolution 0 08 1 6 micron that can be achieved from the ground in a
  consistent manner over long periods of time is particularly exciting
  Instruments can also be mounted at the Nasmyth focus For example

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Site Survey for the Advanced Technology Solar
    Telescope. I. Analysis of the Seeing Data
Authors: Socas-Navarro, H.; Beckers, J.; Brandt, P.; Briggs, J.;
   Brown, T.; Brown, W.; Collados, M.; Denker, C.; Fletcher, S.; Hegwer,
   S.; Hill, F.; Horst, T.; Komsa, M.; Kuhn, J.; Lecinski, A.; Lin, H.;
   Oncley, S.; Penn, M.; Rimmele, T.; Streander, K.
2005PASP..117.1296S    Altcode: 2005astro.ph..8690S
  The site survey for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope concluded
  recently after more than 2 years of data gathering and analysis. Six
  locations, including lake, island, and continental sites, were
  thoroughly probed for image quality and sky brightness. The present
  paper describes the analysis methodology employed to determine the
  height stratification of the atmospheric turbulence. This information
  is crucial, because daytime seeing is often very different between the
  actual telescope aperture (~30 m) and the ground. Two independent
  inversion codes have been developed to simultaneously analyze
  data from a scintillometer array and a solar differential image
  monitor. We show here the results of applying them to a sample subset
  of data from 2003 May that was used for testing. Both codes retrieve a
  similar seeing stratification through the height range of interest. A
  quantitative comparison between our analysis procedure and actual in
  situ measurements confirms the validity of the inversions. The sample
  data presented in this paper reveal a qualitatively different behavior
  for the lake sites (dominated by high-altitude seeing) and the rest
  (dominated by near-ground turbulence).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Advanced Technology Solar Telescope: a progress report
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Keil, S.; Wagner, J.; Dalrymple, N.; Goodrich,
   B.; Hansen, E.; Hill, F.; Hubbard, R.; Phelps, L.; Richards, K.;
   Warner, M.
2005SPIE.5901...41R    Altcode:
  The four-meter Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be
  the most powerful solar telescope and the world's leading resource
  for studying solar magnetism that controls the solar wind, flares,
  coronal mass ejections and variability in the Sun's output. Development
  of a four-meter solar telescope presents many technical challenges,
  which include: thermal control of optics and telescope structure;
  contamination control of the primary mirror to achieve low scattered
  light levels for coronal observations; control of instrumental
  polarization to allow accurate and precise polarimetric observations of
  solar magnetic fields; and high-order solar adaptive optics that uses
  solar granulation as the wavefront sensing target in order to achieve
  diffraction limited imaging and spectroscopy. We give a status report
  of the ATST project focusing on the substantial progress that has been
  made with the design of the ATST. We summarize the design of the major
  subsystems, including the enclosure, the primary and secondary mirror
  assemblies, the coude and Nasmyth focal stations, adaptive optics and
  instrumentation. The site selection has been successfully concluded
  and we discuss areas where the site selection impacts the design.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The ATST Site Survey
Authors: Hill, F.; Beckers, J.; Brandt, P.; Briggs, J. W.; Brown, T.;
   Brown, W.; Collados, M.; Denker, C.; Fletcher, S.; Hegwer, S.; Horst,
   T.; Komsa, M.; Kuhn, J.; Lecinski, A.; Lin, H.; Oncley, S.; Penn, M.;
   Radick, R.; Rimmele, T.; Socas-Navarro, H.; Soltau, D.; Streander, K.
2005AGUSMSP34A..04H    Altcode:
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be the world's
  largest aperture solar telescope, and is being designed for high
  resolution, IR, and coronal research. It must be located at a site that
  maximizes the scientific return of this substantial investment. We
  present the instrumentation, analysis and results of the ATST site
  survey. Two instrumentation sets were deployed at each of six sites to
  measure seeing as a function of height, and sky brightness as a function
  of wavelength and off-limb position. Analysis software was developed
  to estimate the structure function Cn2 as a function of height near
  the ground, and the results were verified by comparison with in-situ
  measurements. Additional software was developed to estimate the sky
  brightness. The statistics of the conditions at the sites were corrected
  for observing habits and the annualized hours of specific observing
  conditions were estimated. These results were used to identify three
  excellent sites suitable to host the ATST: Haleakala, Big Bear and La
  Palma. Among them, Haleakala is proposed as the optimal location of
  the ATST, La Palma and Big Bear being viable alternative sites.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the Relation Between Flow Fields and Magnetic Field
    Evolution in Flare Productive NOAA Active Region 10486
Authors: Deng, N.; Xu, Y.; Yang, G.; Cao, W.; Rimmele, T. R.; Wang,
   H.; Denker, C.
2005AGUSMSP51C..05D    Altcode:
  We present high resolution observations of flow fields within solar NOAA
  active region 10486 before an X10 flare on October 29, 2003. From 2003
  October 28 to November 4, a complex δ-sunspot located in NOAA 10486
  produced dramatic flare activities in the descending phase of the solar
  cycle 23. The flow fields are measured by local correlation tracking
  (LCT) based on speckle masking white-light images, near-infrared (NIR)
  continuum images at 1.56 μm, and G-band images obtained with the Dunn
  Solar Telescope (DST) of the National Solar Observatory/Sacramento Peak
  (NSO/SP). NSO's newly developed high-order adaptive optics system at
  the DST was used to achieve diffraction-limited imaging with a high
  signal-to-noise ratio. The spatial resolution of the images approaches
  the diffraction limit of the 76 cm aperture DST of about 0.14 ″ at
  527 nm. In addtion, we use longitudinal magnetograms from the Michelson
  Doppler Imager (MDI) on board the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory
  (SoHO) to study the evolution of photospheric magnetic field and
  its correlation with flow fields in this flare productive active
  region. We link strong magnetic shear and fast emergence of magnetic
  flux to photospheric flows, which might trigger the flares. Our result
  suggests that the time-series analysis of the photospheric flow fields
  is a critical observational diagnostic for the evolution of magnetic
  fields in solar active regions. This work was supported by NSF under
  grant ATM 03-42560, ATM 03-13591, ATM 02-36945, and MRI AST 00-79482
  and by NASA under grant NAG 5-13661.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Design of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Wagner, J.; Rimmele, .; Keil, S.
2005AGUSMSP34A..02W    Altcode:
  The ATST is a 4-m aperture, off-axis solar telescope with integrated
  adaptive optics, low-scattered light, infrared, coronagraphic,
  and polarimetric capabilities. We present an overview of the ATST
  design. The ATST design has progressed in to the point where the project
  is ready to lead contracts for construction of major subsystems. These
  subsystems include the enclosure, the telescope mount assembly, and
  the primary and secondary mirror assemblies. We summarize the design
  concepts of the major telescope components. Thermal control of telescope
  structure and optical components to ambient temperature has been a
  major design focus. Where applicable, the conditions at the selected
  site, Haleakala, have been worked into the designs. The design of the
  wavefront control system that integrates telescope alignment functions,
  active control of the primary and high order adaptive optics will be
  summarized. A vigorous systems engineering approach has been implemented
  to ensure that the telescope will deliver the diffraction limited
  imaging performance specified in the Science Requirements Document.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First-Light Instrumentation for the Advanced Technology
    Solar Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Balasubramaniam, K.; Berger, T.; Elmore, D.;
   Gary, A.; Keller, C.; Kuhn, J.; Lin, H.; Mickey, D.; Pevtsov, A.;
   Robinson, B.; Sigwarth, M.; Soccas-Navarro, H.
2005AGUSMSP34A..03R    Altcode:
  The 4m Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) is the next
  generation ground based solar telescope. In this paper we provide
  an overview of the ATST post-focus instrumentation. The majority of
  ATST instrumentation is located in an instrument Coude lab facility,
  where a rotating platform provides image de-rotation. A high order
  adaptive optics system delivers a corrected beam to the Coude lab
  facility. Alternatively, instruments can be mounted at the Nasmyth
  focus. For example, instruments for observing the faint corona
  preferably will be mounted at Nasmyth where maximum throughput
  is achieved. In addition, the Nasmyth focus has minimum telescope
  polarization and minimum stray light. We give an overview of the
  initial set of first generation instruments: the Visible-Light
  Broadband Imager (VLBI), the Visible Spectro-Polarimeter (ViSP),
  the Near-IR Spectro-Polarimeter (NIRSP), which includes a coronal
  module, and the Visible Tunable Filter. We also discuss the unique and
  efficient approach to the ATST instrumentation, which builds on the use
  of common components such as detector systems, polarimetry packages
  and various opto-mechanical components. For example, the science
  requirement for polarimetric sensitivity (10-5 relative to intensity)
  and accuracy (5'10-4 relative to intensity) place strong constraints
  on the polarization analysis and calibration units. Consequently,
  these systems are provided at the facility level, rather than making
  it part of the requirement for each instrument.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Overview and Status Report on the Advanced Technology Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Keil, S. L.; Rimmele, T.; Wagner, J.; ATST Team
2005AGUSMSP34A..01K    Altcode:
  The ATST is a 4-m aperture, off-axis solar telescope with integrated
  adaptive optics, low-scattered light, infrared, coronagraphic, and
  polarimetric capabilities. It will resolve the essential, fine-scale
  magnetic features and their dynamics that dictate the varying release
  of energy from the Sun's atmosphere. The ATST design is optimized in
  terms of throughput, scattered light, and instrumental polarization
  properties to perform precision vector magnetic field measurements down
  to its diffraction limit (0.03 arcsec at 500 nm) and throughout the
  solar atmosphere. Its collecting area, which is a factor of 16 greater
  than today's solar telescopes, will provide the sensitivity to measure
  both weak fields and rapidly evolving stronger fields. It has a factor
  of 64 greater collecting area than the largest existing coronagraph,
  and will provide the sensitivity and coronagraphic capability needed
  to measure the weak, fine-scale coronal magnetic fields. With adaptive
  optics and a set of facility class instrumentation the ATST will be
  the worlds leading resource for studying solar magnetism. ATST will
  be the successor to the solar telescopes built in the 1960s and 1970s,
  and is a natural complement to planned space missions. Starting in late
  2001, ATST began a design and development phase. To date the D&amp;D
  phase has produced and refined a science requirements document and a
  conceptual design that would meet those requirements. A conceptual
  design review was held in August of 2003. Following the review, a
  construction proposal, including a complete work breakdown structure
  and cost, was submitted in early 2004 and was successfully peer
  reviewed. NSF astronomy is now in the process of submitting ATST to
  the NSF Major Research Equipment and Facilities Construction program
  review process. During the D&amp;D phase, a thorough site survey was
  also conducted resulting in Haleakala as the site best able to fulfill
  the ATST science requirements. We present a brief overview of the ATST
  program, how it fits into the broader picture of solar facilities and
  capabilities, and discuss the current status of the ATST project and
  plans for constructing and commissioning the ATST.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Long Exposure Point Spread Function Estimation from Adaptive
    Optics Loop Data
Authors: Marino, J.; Rimmele, T.; Christou, J.
2005AGUSMSP51A..01M    Altcode:
  Current work in Solar Physics requires high resolution observations
  from ground based telescopes. However, the performance of any ground
  based telescope is ultimately limited by optical aberrations produced
  by atmospheric turbulence. Adaptive Optics (AO) is a powerful tool
  that artially corrects for these optical aberrations in real time,
  considerately improving the image quality. Wavefront sensor and mirror
  data produced by the AO system during closed loop operation contains
  information about correction performance and seeing conditions. We
  present a method to estimate the Long Exposure Point Spread Function
  (LEPSF) of the AO corrected image using AO loop data. This estimation
  can then be used to improve image quality using deconvolution
  post-processing techniques. In Solar Physics observations seeing
  conditions are highly variable. Thus, an estimation of the LEPSF is only
  useful if it corresponds to the exact time an image was taken. LEPSFs
  produced by this method are simultaneous with the captured AO corrected
  image. We will apply this method to time series of intensity images,
  velocity maps and line of sight magnetic field of sunspots and
  pores. Obtaining high resolution AO and post-facto corrected data with
  homogeneous image quality and more reliable quantitative measurements.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-Spatial-Resolution Imaging Combining High-Order Adaptive
    Optics, Frame Selection, and Speckle Masking Reconstruction
Authors: Denker, Carsten; Mascarinas, Dulce; Xu, Yan; Cao, Wenda;
   Yang, Guo; Wang, Haimin; Goode, Philip R.; Rimmele, Thomas
2005SoPh..227..217D    Altcode:
  We present, for the first time, high-spatial-resolution observations
  combining high-order adaptive optics (AO), frame selection, and
  post-facto image correction via speckle masking. The data analysis is
  based on observations of solar active region NOAA 10486 taken with the
  Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) at the Sacramento Peak Observatory (SPO) of
  the National Solar Observatory (NSO) on 29 October 2003. The high Strehl
  ratio encountered in AO corrected short-exposure images provides highly
  improved signal-to-noise ratios leading to a superior recovery of the
  object's Fourier phases. This allows reliable detection of small-scale
  solar features near the diffraction limit of the telescope. Speckle
  masking imaging provides access to high-order wavefront aberrations,
  which predominantly originate at high atmospheric layers and are only
  partially corrected by the AO system. In addition, the observations
  provided qualitative measures of the image correction away from the
  lock point of the AO system. We further present a brief inspection
  of the underlying imaging theory discussing the limitations and
  prospects of this multi-faceted image reconstruction approach in
  terms of the recovery of spatial information, photometric accuracy,
  and spectroscopic applications.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Photospheric Shear Flows along the Magnetic Neutral Line of
    Active Region 10486 prior to an X10 Flare
Authors: Yang, Guo; Xu, Yan; Cao, Wenda; Wang, Haimin; Denker, Carsten;
   Rimmele, Thomas R.
2004ApJ...617L.151Y    Altcode:
  We present high spatial resolution observations of proper motions in
  the solar NOAA Active Region 10486 using a high-order adaptive optics
  system, frame selection, and speckle-masking image reconstruction. The
  data were obtained with the Dunn Solar Telescope of the National Solar
  Observatory/Sacramento Peak on 2003 October 29. The resolution of the
  images approaches the diffraction-limited resolution of the Dunn Solar
  Telescope of about 0.14" at 527 nm. We analyzed a 2 hr time series with
  a 1 minute cadence prior to an X10 white-light flare. Local correlation
  tracking was used to measure the photospheric proper motions. We find
  specific evidence of strong shear flows along the magnetic neutral line;
  these shear flows are well defined and correlated with white-light
  flare kernels in the visible and infrared. The speed along the flow
  channels can reach up to 1.6 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>, and the separation of
  channels with head-on flows can be less than 1". Counterstreaming and
  complex flow patterns have been distinguishing characteristics of this
  extraordinarily flare-productive active region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar multiconjugate adaptive optics at the Dunn Solar
Telescope: preliminary results
Authors: Langlois, Maud; Moretto, Gil; Richards, Kit; Hegwer, Steve;
   Rimmele, Thomas R.
2004SPIE.5490...59L    Altcode:
  We report here the preliminary results obtained with the multi-conjugate
  adaptive optics (MCAO) system at the Dunn Solar Telescope (DST/NSO
  MCAO) and the optical setup and performances are presented in more
  details in Moretto et al. in this proceeding. This system relies on
  the tomography technique, in which three WFS are used, each of them
  coupled to extended images of the Sun"s granulation and/or sunspots,
  to retrieve a 3D measurement of the turbulent volume in order to
  command the two DMs. We used a 5x5 subaperture Shack-Hartmann with
  cross correlation applied on three selected guiding regions - 18"
  wide- within the 1.25' full FOV. We also report on the estimation of
  turbulence distribution and the future MCAO performances based on a
  separate tomographic wavefront sensing experiment using the Dunn Solar
  Telescope adaptive optics system. In addition, we obtained estimates
  of the turbulence distribution. The results from this article provides
  an important step forward for building a full solar multi-conjugate
  adaptive optics system for the Dunn Solar Telescope and in the long
  term for the future 4 meter ATST telescope.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Optical set-up and design for solar multiconjugate adaptive
    optics at Dunn Solar Telescope/NSO
Authors: Moretto, Gil; Langlois, Maud; Richards, Kit; Hegwer, Steve;
   Gilliam, Doug; Rimmele, Thomas R.
2004SPIE.5490..905M    Altcode:
  The Sun is an ideal target for the development and application of
  Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics (MCAO). A solar MCAO system is being
  developed by the National Solar Observatory, Adaptive Optics Project,
  with the purpose of extending the corrected science field of view to
  1.25Arcmin. A detailed optical set-up, design and optical performance
  for such a system is presented and discussed here. The preliminary
  results for this first MCAO/DST run, are presented in more details by
  Langlois et al [1] at this conference.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Long-exposure point spread function estimation from adaptive
    optics loop data
Authors: Marino, Jose; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Christou, Julian C.
2004SPIE.5490..184M    Altcode:
  Adaptive Optics (AO) systems provide real time correction for
  atmospherical aberrations. They have become an indispensable tool
  for ground based astronomical observations. However, correction
  provided by AO is only partial. Further correction can be achieved
  using post-processing techniques. Post-processing techniques such as
  deconvolution rely on a good estimation of the long exposure Point
  Spread Function (PSF). In the case of Solar Physics obtaining a
  long exposure PSF can be particularly difficult due to the lack of
  point sources in the field of view and the highly variable seeing
  conditions. We present a method to estimate the long exposure PSF
  of an AO corrected image using AO loop data. AO closed loop data
  provides enough information about the residual aberrations that were
  not corrected by the system and about the seeing conditions present
  at a certain time. With this information an estimated long exposure
  PSF can be constructed for each captured image. The PSF can be used to
  deconvolve the images. We will be presenting first results of applying
  this method to solar images.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Advanced Technology Solar Telescope: conceptual design
    and status
Authors: Keil, Stephen; Oschmann, Jacobus M., Jr.; Rimmele, Thomas R.;
   Hubbard, Rob; Warner, Mark; Price, Ron; Dalrymple, Nathan; Goodrich,
   Bret; Hegwer, Steven; Hill, Frank; Wagner, Jeremy
2004SPIE.5489..625K    Altcode:
  The Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) has finished its
  conceptual design stage, submitted a proposal for construction funding
  and is working towards a system level preliminary design review later
  this year. The current concept (including integrated adaptive optics
  and instrumentation) will be reviewed with concentration on solutions
  to the unique engineering challenges for a four meter solar telescope
  that have been previously presented. The overall status will be given
  with a concentration on near term milestones and impact on final
  completion targeted in 2012.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar site testing for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Hill, Frank; Beckers, Jacques; Brandt, Peter; Briggs, John;
   Brown, Timothy; Brown, W.; Collados, Manuel; Denker, Carsten; Fletcher,
   Steven; Hegwer, Steven; Horst, T.; Komsa, Mark; Kuhn, Jeff; Lecinski,
   Alice; Lin, Haosheng; Oncley, Steve; Penn, Matthew; Rimmele, Thomas
   R.; Socas-Navarro, Hector; Streander, Kim
2004SPIE.5489..122H    Altcode:
  The location of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) is a
  critical factor in the overall performance of the telescope. We have
  developed a set of instrumentation to measure daytime seeing, sky
  brightness, cloud cover, water vapor, dust levels, and weather. The
  instruments have been located at six sites for periods of one to two
  years. Here we describe the sites and instrumentation, discuss the
  data reduction, and present some preliminary results. We demonstrate
  that it is possible to estimate seeing as a function of height near the
  ground with an array of scintillometers, and that there is a distinct
  qualitative difference in daytime seeing between sites with or without
  a nearby lake.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Recent advances in solar adaptive optics
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.
2004SPIE.5490...34R    Altcode:
  Solar adaptive optics has become an indispensable tool at ground
  based solar telescopes. Over the last few years several solar
  adaptive optics systems have been deployed at major ground based solar
  telescopes. These systems enable diffraction limited observations of
  the sun for a significant fraction of the available observing time
  at these telescopes. New ground breaking scientific results have been
  achieved with solar adaptive optics. This paper summarizes the recent
  progress in the field of solar adaptive optics.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Optical design for a Fabry-Perot image interferometer for
    solar observations
Authors: Moretto, Gilberto; Gary, G. Allen; Balasubramaniam, K. S.;
   Rimmele, Thomas R.
2004SPIE.5492.1773M    Altcode:
  We outline here a preliminary optical design study for a telecentric
  tunable Fabry-Perot etalon system. The first result of the optical
  optimization into a design, which delivers performance image quality
  and telecentricity, is presented here. Bearing in mind the possible
  use of such a study design - as a possible instrument for the Advanced
  Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) - we also show that a hybrid design
  strategy delivers a compact design that will fit inside the ATST's
  Coude optical tables.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Instrumentation for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; Hubbard, Robert P.; Balasubramaniam,
   K. S.; Berger, Tom; Elmore, David; Gary, G. Allen; Jennings, Don;
   Keller, Christoph; Kuhn, Jeff; Lin, Haosheng; Mickey, Don; Moretto,
   Gilberto; Socas-Navarro, Hector; Stenflo, Jan O.; Wang, Haimin
2004SPIE.5492..944R    Altcode:
  The 4-m aperture Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) is the
  next generation ground based solar telescope. In this paper we provide
  an overview of the ATST post-focus instrumentation. The majority of
  ATST instrumentation is located in an instrument Coude lab facility,
  where a rotating platform provides image de-rotation. A high order
  adaptive optics system delivers a corrected beam to the Coude lab
  facility. Alternatively, instruments can be mounted at Nasmyth or
  a small Gregorian area. For example, instruments for observing the
  faint corona preferably will be mounted at Nasmyth focus where maximum
  throughput is achieved. In addition, the Nasmyth focus has minimum
  telescope polarization and minimum stray light. We describe the set of
  first generation instruments, which include a Visible-Light Broadband
  Imager (VLBI), Visible and Near-Infrared (NIR) Spectropolarimeters,
  Visible and NIR Tunable Filters, a Thermal-Infrared Polarimeter &amp;
  Spectrometer and a UV-Polarimeter. We also discuss unique and efficient
  approaches to the ATST instrumentation, which builds on the use of
  common components such as detector systems, polarimetry packages and
  various opto-mechanical components.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Diagnostic spectroscopy of G-band brightenings in the
    photosphere of the sun
Authors: Langhans, K.; Schmidt, W.; Rimmele, T.
2004A&A...423.1147L    Altcode:
  A detailed analysis of high-resolution spectra obtained in three
  different wavelength regions (at 430 nm, 526 nm and 569 nm) of G-band
  bright points in the solar photosphere is presented. They show an
  average intensity contrast of 11% with respect to the “quiet” sun
  reference. The CH lines are weakened in the bright point interior. The
  atomic lines, too, e.g. the Fe I line at 569.15 nm, weaken in the bright
  point interior. In contrast thereto, the absorption line of single
  ionized iron at 526.48 nm remains almost constant between bright point
  interior and the immediate surroundings. Line-of-sight velocities show a
  stronger downflow within bright points than in the close environment. A
  net downflow relative to the intergranular surroundings of around 80
  m/s is measured. Filling factors are calculated from a comparison with
  synthesized spectra for different flux tube models and are used to
  estimate the “true” velocity in bright points with respect to their
  immediate surroundings. We obtain up- and downflows in the order of one
  km s<SUP>-1</SUP>, in agreement with the magneto-convective picture of
  the formation and dispersal of magnetic flux tubes. From the different
  behavior of the metallic lines and the CH lines we conclude that the
  line-weakening process that leads to the G-band bright points is mainly
  due to hot-wall radiation. This confirms that these bright points are
  indeed magnetic flux elements.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evaluation of Seeing-Induced Cross Talk in Tip-Tilt-Corrected
    Solar Polarimetry
Authors: Judge, Philip G.; Elmore, David F.; Lites, Bruce W.; Keller,
   Christoph U.; Rimmele, Thomas
2004ApOpt..43.3817J    Altcode:
  We reanalyze the effects of atmosphere-induced image motions on the
  measurement of solar polarized light using a formalism developed by
  Lites. Our reanalysis is prompted by the advent of adaptive optics (AO)
  systems that reduce image motion and higher-order aberrations, by the
  availability of liquid crystals as modulation devices, and by the need
  to understand how best to design polarimeters for future telescopes
  such as the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope. In this first attempt
  to understand the major issues, we analyze the influence of residual
  image motion (tip-tilt) corrections of operational AO systems on the
  cross talk between Stokes parameters and present results for several
  polarization analysis schemes. Higher-order wave-front corrections are
  left for future research. We also restrict our discussion to the solar
  photosphere, which limits several important parameters of interest,
  using some recent magnetoconvection simulations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Latest Results from the ATST Site Survey
Authors: Hill, F.; Collados, M.; Navarro, H.; Beckers, J.; Brandt,
   P.; Briggs, J.; Brown, T.; Denker, C.; Hegwer, S.; Horst, T.; Komsa,
   M.; Kuhn, J.; Lin, H.; Oncley, S.; Penn, M.; Rimmele, T.; Soltau,
   D.; Streander, K.
2004AAS...204.6909H    Altcode: 2004BAAS...36..795H
  We present the latest results and current status of the site survey
  portion of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) project. The
  ATST will provide high resolution solar data in the visible and IR. The
  site is a major factor determining the performance of the telescope. The
  most critical site characteristics are the statistics of daytime seeing
  quality and sky clarity. These conditions are being measured by a suite
  of instruments at three sites (Big Bear, Haleakala, La Palma). These
  sites were chosen from a set of six that have been tested starting in
  November 2001. The instrumentation includes a solar differential image
  motion monitor, an array of scintillometers, a miniature coronagraph,
  a dust monitor, and a weather station. The analysis of the data provides
  an estimate of the seeing as a function of height near the ground. We
  will present the latest results of the analysis of the survey data set.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High resolution flare observations using adaptive optics
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Sankarasubramanian, K.
2004AAS...204.2701R    Altcode: 2004BAAS...36..693R
  We present a time sequence of a flare observed on October 23, 2003
  in active region NOAA 0486 near the east limb. The same active region
  produced the huge flare on October 29, 2003. The Universal Birefringened
  Filter (UBF) was used to record narrow band filtergrams in H-α and
  the iron line FeI 5434. The Diffraction-Limited Spectro- Polarimeter
  (DLSP) performed vector magnetic field measurements before and after
  the flare. The high order adaptive optics system provided diffraction
  limited imaging during a large fraction of the time during which
  the flare was observed. <P />The dynamic H-α core flare sequence,
  during which a super-penumbral loop system erupts, will be shown. We
  were able to resolve finestructure in the flare ribbons at scales of
  0.2". Footpoints of loops as well as individual loop tops are seen to
  brighten as the loop system erupts. To our knowledge for the first time
  we observe flare structure at spatial scales of 0.2" - the diffraction
  limit of the DST. H-α wing dopplergrams show structure on similar
  spatial scales. The signature of the flare is also seen in the core of
  the line FeI 5434 Å, which forms in the upper photosphere. Comparing
  DLSP vector magnetograms before and after the flare we find evidence
  of flux cancellation at small spatial scales.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Diffraction Limited Spectro-Polarimetry at the Dunn Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Sankarasubramanian, K.; Rimmele, T. R.; Lites, B. W.
2004AAS...204.2006S    Altcode: 2004BAAS...36..686S
  The Diffraction Limited Spectro-Polarimeter (DLSP) is a collaborative
  project between the National Solar Observatory (NSO) and the
  High-Altitude Observatory (HAO). This new instrument, along with the
  high-order Adaptive Optics (AO-76) system (which is being developed
  at the NSO) has been used to measure magnetic fields on the solar
  photosphere at the highest spatial resolution (0.2 arcsec which is
  the diffraction limit of the DST at the 630.0nm wavelength). A few
  preliminary results obtained from the first observing run with this
  instrument are, <P />(1) The fine structures present inside the sunspot
  umbra (like the umbral dots) show upflows and reduced field strengths
  compared to the surrounding umbra. <P />(2) The sizes of these umbral
  fine structures goes down to the diffraction limit of the DST (about
  0.2 arcsec). This result confirms that the instrument did achieve
  its full capability. <P />(3) There are small-scale convective up and
  down flows in the light bridges. The strength of these flow is about
  a km/sec. The field strengths are smaller in these regions compared to
  the surrounding umbra. At some places in the light bridges, the field
  strengths are as small as half of the umbral field strength. <P />(4)
  There are small-scale upflows in the inner penumbra of the observed
  sunspot. These regions coincide with the inner foot-point of the bright
  penumbral filaments as seen in the continuum intensity map. Some of
  these upflow regions also show a reduced field strength.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multiconjugation Optical Relay for an Off-Axis Solar Telescope
Authors: Moretto, Gil; Langlois, Maud; Rimmele, Thomas R.
2004PASP..116..441M    Altcode:
  The Sun is an ideal object for the development and application of
  multiconjugate adaptive optics (MCAO). An effort to develop solar
  MCAO is pursued by the National Solar Observatory (NSO) Adaptive
  Optics Project. In developing solar MCAO, we bear in mind its possible
  implementation into the proposed 4 m Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
  (ATST). Two possible relay optical designs feeding an MCAO section
  and the coudé section of a 4 m off-axis solar telescope, such as the
  proposed ATST, are presented and discussed here.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-Spatial Resolution Observations of Flow Fields in Solar
    Active Region NOAA 10486
Authors: Yang, G.; Xu, Y.; Cao, W.; Wang, H.; Denker, C.; Rimmele,
   T. R.
2004AAS...204.0210Y    Altcode: 2004BAAS...36..669Y
  We present high-spatial resolution observations of proper motions in
  solar active region NOAA 10486 using the newly developed high-order
  adaptive optics (AO) system at the Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) of the
  National Solar Observatory/Sacramento Peak (NSO/SP) on 2003 October
  29. The images were obtained with high-order AO, frame selection, and
  speckle masking image reconstruction. We analyze a two hour time series
  with 1-minute cadence in the context of an X10 white-light flare. Local
  correlation tracking (LCT) was used to measure the horizontal proper
  motions in the photosphere and relate them to the strong shear observed
  in the magnetic field configuration.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma Flows Observed in Magnetic Flux Concentrations and
    Sunspot Fine Structure Using Adaptive Optics
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.
2004ApJ...604..906R    Altcode:
  We present diffraction-limited observations of magnetic flux
  concentrations and penumbral and umbral fine structure within an
  active region observed at disk center. We recorded G-band images,
  magnetograms, Dopplergrams, and narrowband filtergrams, using the
  Universal Birefringent Filter (UBF) at the Dunn Solar Telescope
  (DST). The National Solar Observatory (NSO) adaptive optics system at
  the DST was used to achieve diffraction-limited long-exposure imaging
  with a high signal-to-noise ratio. The main results can be summarized
  as follows: Strong and spatially narrow downflows are observed at
  the edge of magnetic structures, such as small flux concentrations
  (sometimes also referred to as flux tubes), pores, a light bridge,
  and the sunspot umbrae. For the particular sunspot observed, we find
  strong evidence for what appear to be vigorous, small-scale convection
  patterns in a light bridge. We observe extremely narrow (&lt;0.2")
  channels or sheets of downflowing plasma. Flux concentrations as seen in
  intensity expand from a height close to where the continuum is formed
  to the height of formation for the G band. These observations indicate
  that the G band forms in the mid-photosphere. We are able to identify
  individual penumbral fibrils in our data and find a bright (hot) upflow
  and a more vertical field structure at the filament footpoint near
  the umbral boundary. The observations are consistent with a filament
  geometry in which the field and flow turn to a nearly horizontal, dark
  structure over a distance of about 0.2". In the deep photosphere we
  observe strong upflows of the order of 1 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> in umbral
  dots. We compare our results with theoretical model predictions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Diffraction Limited Spectro-Polarimeter: a new instrument
    for high-resolution solar polarimetry
Authors: Sankarasubramanian, K.; Gullixson, Craig; Hegwer, Stephen;
   Rimmele, Thomas R.; Gregory, Scott; Spence, Tony; Fletcher, Stephen;
   Richards, Kit; Rousset, Emilie; Lites, Bruce; Elmore, David; Streander,
   Kim; Sigwarth, Michael
2004SPIE.5171..207S    Altcode:
  The National Solar Observatory in collaboration with the High-Altitude
  Observatory is developing a new solar polarimeter, the Diffraction
  Limited Spectro-Polarimeter. In conjunction with a new high-order
  adaptive optics system at the NSO Dunn Solar Telescope, the DLSP
  design facilitates very high angular resolution observations of
  solar vector magnetic fields. This project is being carried out in two
  phases. As a follow-on to the successful completion of the first phase,
  the ongoing DLSP Phase II implements a high QE CCD camera system,
  a ferro-electric liquid crystal modulator, and a new opto-mechanical
  system for polarization calibration. This paper documents in detail the
  development of the modulator system and its performance, and presents
  preliminary results from an engineering run carried out in combination
  with the new NSO high-order AO system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Advanced Technology Solar Telescope: a progress report
Authors: Oschmann, Jim; Dalrymple, Nathan; Warner, Mark; Price, Ron;
   Hill, Frank; Hubbard, Rob; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Keller, Christoph U.;
   Keil, Stephen
2004SPIE.5171..160O    Altcode:
  The 4m ATST will be the most powerful solar telescope in the world,
  providing a unique scientific tool to study the Sun and other
  astronomical objects. The design and development phase for the Advance
  Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) is progressing. The conceptual design
  review (CoDR) for the ATST is scheduled for August 2003. We present a
  brief description of the science requirements of ATST, and remind the
  reader of some of the technical challenges of building a 4-m solar
  telescope. We will discuss some of the design strategies that will
  allow us to achieve the required performance specifications, present
  conceptual designs for the ATST, and summarize the results of trades
  we have made on our path to the CoDR. The thermal impacts to local,
  self-induced seeing with respect to some of our system level trades
  that have been completed will be discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Development of SCIDAR for solar observations
Authors: Beckers, Jacques M.; Rimmele, Thomas R.
2004SPIE.5171..195B    Altcode:
  In nighttime astronomy Vernin and co-workers have proposed and
  subsequently developed the so-called SCIDAR (SCIntillation Detection
  And Ranging) technique to probe C<SUB>n</SUB><SUP>2</SUP>(h). It makes
  use of the double shadow band (or scintillation) pattern formed on
  a telescope aperture by the two components of a binary star. We are
  developing a variant of this technique for solar astronomy. It uses
  pairs of small apertures on the solar image with diameters smaller
  than the isoplanatic patch ("artificial double stars"). Within
  the isoplanatic patch the complex amplitude (intensity and phase)
  of the atmospheric wavefront disturbances is constant. Solar SCIDAR
  (or S-SCIDAR) makes use of this. We will present the results of the
  first (inconclusive) experiments of this S-SCIDAR technique as used on
  the 76 cm aperture Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) and the 152 cm aperture
  McMath-Pierce facility (McM-P) of the US National Solar Observatory. It
  uses a 45 x 45 lenslet array placed in the solar image. The size of
  the lenslets corresponds to 2.25 x 2.25 arcsec at the DST and 1.67 x
  1.67 arcsec at the McM-P; the separation of lenslet pairs on the DST
  (and hence of the separations of the artificial double stars) ranges
  from 2.25 arcsec to 140 arcsec. The lenslet array forms an array of
  pupil images on a CCD detector.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics - relay optical designs for
    a 4-m off-axis solar telescope
Authors: Moretto, Gilberto; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Langlois, Maud
2004SPIE.5171..171M    Altcode:
  The Sun is an ideal object for the development and application of
  Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics (MCAO). An effort to develop solar MCAO
  is pursued by the NSO"s Adaptive Optics Project. In developing solar
  MCAO we bear in mind its possible implementation into the proposed
  4-M Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST). Two possible relay
  optical designs feeding a MCAO section and the Coudé section of a
  4-M off-axis solar telescope, such as the proposed ATST, are presented
  and discussed here.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First results from the NSO/NJIT solar adaptive optics system
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; Richards, Kit; Hegwer, Stephen; Fletcher,
   Stephen; Gregory, Scott; Moretto, Gilberto; Didkovsky, Leonid V.;
   Denker, Carsten J.; Dolgushin, Alexander; Goode, Philip R.; Langlois,
   Maud; Marino, Jose; Marquette, William
2004SPIE.5171..179R    Altcode:
  The National Solar Observatory and the New Jersey Institute of
  Technology have developed two 97 actuator solar adaptive optics
  (AO) systems based on a correlating Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor
  approach. The first engineering run was successfully completed
  at the Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) at Sacramento Peak, New Mexico
  in December 2002. The first of two systems is now operational at
  Sacramento Peak. The second system will be deployed at the Big Bear
  Solar Observatory by the end of 2003. The correlating Shack-Hartmann
  wavefront sensor is able to measure wavefront aberrations for
  low-contrast, extended and time-varying objects, such as solar
  granulation. The 97-actuator solar AO system operates at a loop
  update rate of 2.5 kHz and achieves a closed loop bandwidth (0dB
  crossover error rejection) of about 130 Hz. The AO system is capable
  of correcting atmospheric seeing at visible wavelengths during median
  seeing conditions at both the NSO/Sacramento Peak site and the Big Bear
  Solar Observatory. We present an overview of the system design. The
  servo loop was successfully closed and first AO corrected images were
  recorded. We present first results from the new, high order AO system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High speed low latency solar adaptive optics camera
Authors: Richards, Kit; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Hill, Reuben; Chen, Jianxin
2004SPIE.5171..316R    Altcode:
  This paper describes a versatile camera designed to operate at high
  frame rates of &gt; 2kHz. Such high frame rates are required to reduce
  the latency, i.e., achieve high bandwidth in a solar adaptive optics
  application. The camera was designed around a 1280x1024 pixel CMOS
  10-bit sensor with a readout rate of 2 microseconds per row. The
  output is switchable between a standard Camera Link interface with
  four 10-bit ports (standard camera mode) and a non-standard Camera
  Link interface with twelve 8-bit ports (adaptive optics mode). The
  programmable camera interface maps blocks of pixels to output ports
  enabling multiple regions of interest. This mode is of particular
  interest for solar multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO). The speed
  of the camera is determined by the number of rows of pixels needed
  in the application. For example, a 200x200 pixel sub-array that is
  needed for the 97-actuator solar adaptive optics system at the Dunn
  Solar Telescope can be read out at a rate of 2.5kHz. Camera design
  and performance will be discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Three-dimensional high-order wavefront sensing, anisoplanatism,
    and evaluation of the feasibility of solar MCAO
Authors: Langlois, Maud; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Moretto, Gilberto
2004SPIE.5171..187L    Altcode:
  Multiconjugate adaptive optics has been proposed in order to
  extend the size of the corrected field of view with respect to
  the classical AO field of view. In order to achieve this, a three
  dimensional measurement of the turbulent volume is needed to collect
  the information to command the several deformable mirrors. This can
  be done by using tomography, in which several WFS are used, each
  of them coupled to a sky region. Here we report the experimental
  demonstration of such evaluation for solar observations. In addition,
  we confront these results on turbulence distribution with a study of
  AO corrected images by using multi point large field of view wavefront
  sensing with the new Dunn Solar Telescope adaptive optics system. This
  yields to information on the AO system performances and provide useful
  estimate of the PSF variation across the field. The results from this
  article provides an important step forward for building a full solar
  multi-conjugate adaptive optics system for the Dunn Solar Telescope
  and in a longer term for the future 4 meter ATST telescope.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Science Goals and Development of the Advanced Technology
    Solar Telescope
Authors: Keil, S. L.; Rimmele, T. R.; Oschmann, J.; Hubbard, R.;
   Warner, M.; Price, R.; Dalrymple, N.; Atst Team
2004IAUS..223..581K    Altcode: 2005IAUS..223..581K
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will perform
  high-resolution studies of the Sun's magnetic fields needed to
  understand their role in the fundamental processes responsible for solar
  variability. The generation of magnetic fields through dynamo processes,
  the amplification of fields through the interaction with plasma flows,
  and the destruction of fields remain poorly understood. There is
  incomplete insight as to what physical mechanisms are responsible for
  heating the corona, what causes variations in the radiative output
  of the Sun, and what mechanisms trigger flares and coronal mass
  ejections. Progress in answering these critical questions requires
  study of the interaction of the magnetic field and convection with a
  resolution sufficient to observe scales fundamental to these processes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Properties of Magnetic and Velocity Fields in and around
    Solar Pores
Authors: Sankarasubramanian, K.; Rimmele, Thomas
2003ApJ...598..689S    Altcode:
  We studied the magnetic and velocity fields of four pores situated
  close to the disk center and its surrounding regions. We find the
  following results from our analysis: The velocity inside the pore
  is very close to zero, whereas there is a strong and narrow downflow
  around the pore. The vertical velocity gradient observed at the edge of
  the pore is stronger than the velocity gradient seen in intergranular
  lanes. Immediately surrounding these narrow downflows, normal granular
  convection is observed. This observation is consistent with the
  theoretical picture of an isolated flux tube embedded in a quiet region
  surrounded by a downflow driven by radiative energy losses. Needle-like
  structures were seen around the pore, with the head of the needle
  showing an upflow. The needle tail ends in the downflow surrounding
  the pore. Assuming the flow is horizontal in the body of the needle,
  the needle-like structures would represent a possible signature of
  circular flow system surrounding the pore. The radial extent of this
  observed flow system (which likely feeds the downflow around the pore)
  is about 10". A pore with relatively large fill fraction shows a small
  upflow in the center surrounded by the downflow, whereas a pore with
  small fill fraction shows downflows throughout the pore. The asymmetries
  of the observed Stokes V profiles and their temporal variations are
  studied. We find temporal variations of V-profile asymmetries observed
  within pores on timescales of 5 minutes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Annular Downflow Around a Solar Pore
Authors: Tritschler, K.; Schmidt, W.; Rimmele, T.
2003ANS...324Q..54T    Altcode: 2003ANS...324b..54T; 2003ANS...324..P07T
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Advanced Technology Solar Telescope - Approach to a Four-meter
    Diffraction Limited Solar Telescope
Authors: Keil, S.; Rimmele, T.; Oschmann, J.; Warner, M.; Dalrymple,
   N.; Hubbard, R.; Price, R.; Goodrich, B.; Keller, C.; ATST Team
2003SPD....34.2019K    Altcode: 2003BAAS...35..847K
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) is intended to be
  the next major step in ground based solar observatories. The ATST
  will provide a laboratory for ultra high resolution, polarimetric
  measurements of all layers of the solar atmosphere. Currently the
  project is preparing a conceptual design to fulfill this mission,
  including plans for the design, development, construction and operation
  of this facility. Given the nearly three-fold increase in aperture
  size over the largest existing solar facilities, our approach combines
  techniques from the newest solar facilities with lessons from recent
  nighttime telescope designs. This approach insures the ATST will meet
  the scientific goals that include diffraction-limited performance in
  the optical for high spatial resolution solar observations and very
  low scattered light to advance coronal observation capabilities. The
  current telescope design incorporates the latest active optics
  techniques, fast focal ratios for the primary optics, an open design
  for ventilation of locally produced seeing, an un-obscured off-axis
  pupil and a very high order adaptive optics system built into the
  telescope from the beginning. Examples of some of the current design
  concepts for the telescope structure, optics, thermal management,
  scattered light control, upgrade paths to multi-conjugate adaptive
  optics, software and facilities to support future potential upgrades
  and instrumentation are given along with some of the key challenges
  that lie ahead. <P />The National Solar Observatory is sponsored and
  supported by the National Science Foundation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Diffraction limited observations of flux concentrations and
    sunspot finestructure using adaptive optics
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.
2003SPD....34.1104R    Altcode: 2003BAAS...35..827R
  We present diffraction limited observations of magnetic flux
  concentrations and penumbral and umbral fine structure within an
  active region observed at disk center. We recorded g-band images,
  magnetograms, dopplergrams and narrow-band filtergrams using the
  Universal Birefringened Filter (UBF) at the Dunn Solar Telescope
  (DST). The adaptive optics system at the DST was used to achieve
  diffraction limited long exposure imaging with high signal-to-noise. The
  main results can be summarized as follows: Strong and spatially
  narrow downflows are observed at the edge of magnetic structures
  such as flux tubes, pores and the sunspot umbra. Flux concentrations
  observed as bright points in intensity expand by about 30-40% from
  a height close to where the continuum is formed and the height of
  formation for the g-band. For the particular sunspot observed and at
  a low altitude in the photosphere we find strong evidence for what
  appears to be vigorous, small-scale convection patterns in parts of
  the umbra and a light bridge. We observe extremely narrow (&lt;0.2")
  channels or sheets of downflowing plasma. We are able to identify
  individual penumbral fibrils in our data and find a small bright (hot)
  upflow and a more vertical field structure at the filament "head" near
  the umbral boundary. The field and flow turn to a nearly horizontal,
  dark structure within only about 0.2 arcsec. We compare our results
  with theoretical model predictions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Single-Mode Fiber Interferometer for the Adaptive Optics
    Wave-Front Test
Authors: Ren, D.; Rimmele, T. R.; Hegwer, S.; Murray, L.
2003PASP..115..355R    Altcode:
  A new and innovative single-mode fiber interferometer is proposed for
  the wave-front test of the adaptive optics (AO) system. It is based
  on a modified Mach-Zehnder interferometer with the two arms replaced
  by optical fibers. It avoids the difficulty of fringe interpretation
  of the conventional Mach-Zehnder interferometer. As fibers are used,
  the whole instrument is compact, flexible, and suitable for the AO
  on-site test. Furthermore, as minimum optical components are used,
  the interferometer is free of calibration and has high measurement
  accuracy. The operation of the interferometer is also very simple,
  and wave front can be tested quickly. We discuss the working principle,
  experiment setup, fringe analysis, and its application for an existing
  AO system. The interferometer can also be used to test wave aberrations
  of a single lens or an optical system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Optical design of high-order adaptive optics for the NSO Dunn
    Solar Telescope and the Big Bear Solar Observatory
Authors: Ren, Deqing; Hegwer, Steven L.; Rimmele, Thomas; Didkovsky,
   Leonid V.; Goode, Philip R.
2003SPIE.4853..593R    Altcode:
  The National Solar Observatory (NSO) and the New Jersey Institute of
  Technology are jointly developing high order solar Adaptive Optics (AO)
  to be deployed at both the Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) and the Big Bear
  Solar Telescope (BBST). These AO systems are expected to deliver first
  light at the end of 2003. We discuss the AO optical designs for both
  the DST and the BBST. The requirements for the optical design of the
  AO system are as follows: the optics must deliver diffraction-limited
  imaging at visible and near infrared over a 190"×190" field of
  view. The focal plane image must be flat over the entire field of view
  to accommodate a long slit and fast spectrograph. The wave-front sensor
  must be able to lock on solar structure such as granulation. Finally,
  the cost for the optical system must fit the limited budget. Additional
  design considerations are the desired high bandwidth for tip/tilt
  correction, which leads to a small, fast and off-the-shelf tilt-tip
  mirror system and high throughput, i.e., a minimal number of optical
  surfaces. In order to eliminate pupil image wander on the wave-front
  sensor, both the deformable mirror and tip-tilt mirror are located on
  the conjugation images of the telescope pupil. We discuss the details
  of the optical design for the high order AO system, which will deliver
  high resolution image at the 0.39 - 1.6 μm wavelength range.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Design and development of the Advanced Technology Solar
    Telescope (ATST)
Authors: Keil, Stephen L.; Rimmele, Thomas; Keller, Christoph U.;
   Hill, Frank; Radick, Richard R.; Oschmann, Jacobus M.; Warner, Mark;
   Dalrymple, Nathan E.; Briggs, John; Hegwer, Steven L.; Ren, Dauxing
2003SPIE.4853..240K    Altcode:
  High-resolution studies of the Sun's magnetic fields are needed for
  a better understanding of solar magnetic fields and the fundamental
  processes responsible for solar variability. The generation of magnetic
  fields through dynamo processes, the amplification of fields through
  the interaction with plasma flows, and the destruction of fields
  are still poorly understood. There is still incomplete insight as
  to what physical mechanisms are responsible for heating the corona,
  what causes variations in the radiative output of the Sun, and what
  mechanisms trigger flares and coronal mass ejections. Progress in
  answering these critical questions requires study of the interaction
  of the magnetic field and convection with a resolution sufficient to
  observe scales fundamental to these processes. The 4m aperture Advanced
  Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be a unique scientific tool,
  with excellent angular resolution, a large wavelength range, and low
  scattered light. With its integrated adaptive optics, the ATST will
  achieve a spatial resolution nearly 10 times better than any existing
  solar telescope. Building a large aperture telescope for viewing the
  sun presents many challenges, some of the more difficult being: · Heat
  control and rejection · Contamination and scattered light control ·
  Control of telescope and instrument polarization · Site selection
  This talk will present a short summary of the scientific questions
  driving the ATST design, the design challenges faced by the ATST, and
  the current status of the developing design and siting considerations

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Diffraction limited spectro-polarimeter - Phase I
Authors: Sankarasubramanian, Kasiviswanathan; Elmore, David F.; Lites,
   Bruce W.; Sigwarth, Michael; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Hegwer, Steven L.;
   Gregory, Scott; Streander, Kim V.; Wilkins, Lawrence M.; Richards,
   K.; Berst, C.
2003SPIE.4843..414S    Altcode:
  A diffraction limited spectro-polarimeter is under construction at the
  National Solar Observatory in collaboration with the High Altitude
  Observatory. The scientific objective of the project is to measure
  the magnetic fields on the Sun up to the diffraction limit of the Dunn
  Solar Telescope. The same instrument would also measure the magnetic
  field of large sunspots or sunspot groups with reasonable spatial
  resolution. This requires a flexible image scale which cannot be
  obtained with the current Advanced Stokes Polarimeter (ASP) without
  loosing 50% of the light. The new spectro-polarimeter is designed
  in such a way that the image scale can be changed without loosing
  much light. It can work either in high-spatial resolution mode (0.09
  arcsec per pixel) with a small field of view (FOV: 65 arcsec) or in
  large FOV mode (163 arcsec) with low-spatial resolution (0.25 arcsec
  per pixel). The phase-I of this project is to design and build the
  spectrograph with flexible image scale. Using the existing modulation,
  calibration optics of the ASP and the ASP control and data acquisition
  system with ASP-CHILL camera, the spectrograph was tested for its
  performance. This paper will concentrate on the performance of the
  spectrograph and will discuss some preliminary results obtained with
  the test runs.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar adaptive optics: a progress report
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; Richards, Kit; Hegwer, Steven L.; Ren,
   Deqing; Fletcher, S.; Gregory, Scott; Didkovsky, Leonid V.; Denker,
   Carsten J.; Marquette, William; Marino, J.; Goode, Philip R.
2003SPIE.4839..635R    Altcode:
  We present a progress report of the solar adaptive optics (AO)
  development program at the National Solar Observatory (NSO) and the
  Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO). Examples of diffraction-limited
  observations obtained with the NSO low-order solar adaptive optics
  system at the Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) are presented. The design
  of the high order adaptive optics systems that will be deployed at
  the DST and the BBSO is discussed. The high order systems will provide
  diffraction-limited observations of the Sun in median seeing conditions
  at both sites.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Technical challenges of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; Keil, Stephen L.; Keller, Christoph
   U.; Hill, Frank; Briggs, John; Dalrymple, Nathan E.; Goodrich, Bret
   D.; Hegwer, Steven L.; Hubbard, Rob; Oschmann, Jacobus M.; Radick,
   Richard R.; Ren, Deqing; Wagner, Jeremy; Wampler, Stephen; Warner, Mark
2003SPIE.4837...94R    Altcode:
  The 4m Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be the most
  powerful solar telescope in the world, providing a unique scientific
  tool to study the Sun and possibly other astronomical objects, such
  as solar system planets. We briefly summarize the science drivers and
  observational requirements of ATST. The main focus of this paper is on
  the many technical challenges involved in designing a large aperture
  solar telescope. The ATST project has entered the design and development
  phase. Development of a 4-m solar telescope presents many technical
  challenges. Most existing high-resolution solar telescopes are designed
  as vacuum telescopes to avoid internal seeing caused by the solar heat
  load. The large aperture drives the ATST to an open-air design, similar
  to night-time telescope designs, and makes thermal control of optics
  and telescope structure a paramount consideration. A heat stop must
  reject most of the energy (13 kW) at prime focus without introducing
  internal seeing. To achieve diffraction-limited observations at visible
  and infrared wavelengths, ATST will have a high order (order 1000
  DoF) adaptive optics system using solar granulation as the wavefront
  sensing target. Coronal observations require occulting in prime focus,
  a Lyot stop and contamination control of the primary. An initial set of
  instruments will be designed as integral part of the telescope. First
  telescope design and instrument concepts will be presented.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-order adaptive optical system for Big Bear Solar
    Observatory
Authors: Didkovsky, Leonid V.; Dolgushyn, Alexander; Marquette,
   William; Nenow, Jeff; Varsik, John; Goode, Philip R.; Hegwer, Steven
   L.; Ren, Deqing; Fletcher, Steve; Richards, Kit; Rimmele, Thomas;
   Denker, Carsten J.; Wang, Haimin
2003SPIE.4853..630D    Altcode:
  We present a high-order adaptive optical system for the 26-inch vacuum
  solar telescope of Big Bear Solar Observatory. A small elliptical
  tip/tilt mirror is installed at the end of the existing coude
  optical path on the fast two-axis tip/tilt platform with its resonant
  frequency around 3.3 kHz. A 77 mm diameter deformable mirror with 76
  subapertures as well as wave-front sensors (correlation tracker and
  Shack-Hartman) and scientific channels for visible and IR polarimetry
  are installed on an optical table. The correlation tracker sensor
  can detect differences at 2 kHz between a 32×32 reference frame
  and real time frames. The WFS channel detects 2.5 kHz (in binned
  mode) high-order wave-front atmosphere aberrations to improve solar
  images for two imaging magnetographs based on Fabry-Perot etalons in
  telecentric configurations. The imaging magnetograph channels may work
  simultaneously in a visible and IR spectral windows with FOVs of about
  180×180 arc sec, spatial resolution of about 0.2 arc sec/pixel and
  SNR of about 400 and 600 accordingly for 0.25 sec integration time.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Design and development of the Advanced Technology Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Keil, S.; Rimmele, T.; Keller, C.; ATST Team
2003AN....324..303K    Altcode:
  Led by the National Solar Observatory, plans have been made to design
  and to develop the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST). The ATST
  will be a 4-m general-purpose solar telescope equipped with adaptive
  optics and versatile post-focus instrumentation. Its main aim will be
  to achieve an angular resolution of 0.03 arcsec (20 km on the solar
  surface). The project and the telescope design are briefly described.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Velocity Measurements of Umbral Dots
Authors: Hartkorn, K.; Rimmele, T.
2003ASPC..286..281H    Altcode: 2003ctmf.conf..281H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Statistical Properties of Asymmetries in and around Sunspots
Authors: Sankarasubramanian, K.; Rimmele, T.
2003ASPC..286..243S    Altcode: 2003ctmf.conf..243S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Residual Intensity and Velocity Measurements of Bright Points
Authors: Hartkorn, K.; Rimmele, T.
2003ASPC..286..193H    Altcode: 2003ctmf.conf..193H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Seeing Characteristic at a Lake-Site Observatory
Authors: Denker, C.; Didkovsky, L.; Marquette, W. H.; Goode, P. R.;
   Venkateswaran, K.; Rimmele, T. R.
2003ASPC..286...23D    Altcode: 2003ctmf.conf...23D
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First Results from the HAO/NSO Diffraction-Limited
    Spectro-Polarimeter
Authors: Lites, B. W.; Elmore, D. F.; Streander, K. V.;
   Sankarasubramanian, K.; Rimmele, T. R.; Sigwarth, M.
2003ASPC..307..324L    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Science Objectives and Technical Challenges of the Advanced
    Technology Solar Telescope (Invited review)
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Keil, S. L.; Keller, C.; Hill, F.; Penn, M.;
   Goodrich, B.; Hegwer, S.; Hubbard, R.; Oschmann, J.; Warner, M.;
   Dalrymple, N.; Radick, R.; Atst Team
2003ASPC..286....3R    Altcode: 2003ctmf.conf....3R
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Long Exposure Point Spread Function Estimation using Wavefront
    Sensor Data
Authors: Marino, J.; Rimmele, T.; Tatulli, E.
2003ASPC..286...69M    Altcode: 2003ctmf.conf...69M
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-order adaptive optical system for Big Bear Solar
    Observatory
Authors: Didkovsky, L. V.; Denker, C.; Goode, P. R.; Wang, H.; Rimmele,
   T. R.
2003AN....324..297D    Altcode:
  A high-order Adaptive Optical (AO) system for the 65 cm vacuum telescope
  of the Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO) is presented. The Coudé-exit
  of the telescope has been modified to accommodate the AO system and two
  imaging magnetograph systems for visible-light and near infrared (NIR)
  observations. A small elliptical tip/tilt mirror directs the light into
  an optical laboratory on the observatory's 2<SUP>mathrm {nd}</SUP>
  floor just below the observing floor. A deformable mirror (DM) with
  77 mm diameter is located on an optical table where it serves two
  wave-front sensors (WFS), a correlation tracker (CT) and Shack-Hartman
  (SH) sensor for the high-order AO system, and the scientific channels
  with the imaging magnetographs. The two-axis tip/tilt platform has a
  resonance frequency around 3.3 kHz and tilt range of about 2 mrad,
  which corresponds to about 25<SUP>”</SUP> in the sky. Based on
  32 x 32 pixel images, the CT detects image displacements between a
  reference frame and real-time frames at a rate of 2 kHz. High-order
  wave-front aberrations are detected in the SH WFS channel from slope
  measurements derived from 76 sub-apertures, which are recorded with
  1,280 x 1,024 pixel Complex Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) camera
  manufactured by Photobit camera. In the 4 x 4 pixel binning mode,
  the data acquisition rate of the CMOS device is more than 2 kHz. Both
  visible-light and NIR imaging magnetographs use Fabry-Pérot etalons in
  telecentric configurations for two-dimensional spectro-polarimetry. The
  optical design of the AO system allows using small aperture prefilters,
  such as interference or Lyot filters, and 70 mm diameter Fabry-Pérot
  etalons covering a field-of-view (FOV) of about 180<SUP>”</SUP>
  x 180<SUP>”</SUP>.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Velocity and Magnetic Fields in and around Pores
Authors: Sankarasubramanian, K.; Rimmele, T.
2003ASPC..286..291S    Altcode: 2003ctmf.conf..291S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Downflows around a solar pore
Authors: Tritschler, A.; Schmidt, W.; Rimmele, T.
2002ESASP.506..477T    Altcode: 2002svco.conf..477T; 2002ESPM...10..477T
  We used the Fabry-Perot interferometer TESOS to observe a solar
  pore near disk center in two photospheric spectral lines (Fe I 557.6
  nm and Fe I 569.1 nm) which correspond to different heights in the
  atmosphere. The measurements were made during the joint campaign with
  the NSO/Sacramento-Peak adaptive optics system installed at the German
  Vacuum Tower Telescope (VTT). The Doppler-velocity measurements show an
  annular downflow around the outer edge of the pore. This downflow is
  persistent during the whole observation period, which is demonstrated
  in the time-averaged Dopplergrams and the corresponding azimuthally
  integrated and time-averaged radial velocity profiles.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spectroscopic observations of G-band bright points
Authors: Langhans, K.; Schmidt, W.; Rimmele, T.
2002ESASP.506..397L    Altcode: 2002ESPM...10..397L; 2002svco.conf..397L
  Imaging in the G-band is commonly used to investigate the morphological
  properties of small magnetic field concentrations in the solar
  photosphere. However the physical background, explaining the brightness
  of these structures, has remained unclear. Our observations add the
  spectroscopic point of view to this discussion. The observations at
  high spatial resolution are obtained with the horizontal spectrograph
  at the Dunn Solar Telescope of the National Solar Observatory, USA. We
  scanned across a pore within an active region and took spectra in three
  different wavelength regions (430 nm, 526 nm, 569 nm) simultaneously
  to G-band and broadband continuum images. We present the results and
  discuss the spectroscopic bright point properties in comparison to
  former observations and synthetic data.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the V-profile asymmetries in sunspots
Authors: Sankarasubramanian, K.; Rimmele, Thomas
2002ESASP.505..571S    Altcode: 2002IAUCo.188..571S; 2002solm.conf..571S
  We studied the statistical properties of V-profile asymmetries in and
  around several sunspots situated at different position on the solar
  disk. The asymmetries formed at different regions of the sunspot
  (like the umbra, penumbra etc.) are clearly separated. Each of
  the sunspot showed similar relation between the area and amplitude
  asymmetries. A bi-modal distribution was seen in the plot between the
  area and amplitude asymmetries. The sunspot umbra showed very little
  area and amplitude asymmetries. The penumbral region showed larger
  area asymmetries compared to the amplitude asymmetries whereas the
  light-bridge and small-scale fields showed larger amplitude asymmetries
  compared to the area asymmetries. These asymmetries were compared with
  the velocity gradients and showed good correlation between the two,
  suggesting that the asymmetries were produced due to the gradients in
  the velocity. The results are compared with the results obtained with
  the SIR-inversion code and found good agreement.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Bisector Analysis of Stokes Profiles: Effects Due to Gradients
    in the Physical Parameters
Authors: Sankarasubramanian, K.; Rimmele, Thomas
2002ApJ...576.1048S    Altcode:
  The asymmetry of Stokes V profiles of the spectral lines λ6301.5 and
  λ6302.5 was utilized to systematically study a sunspot observed close
  to the disk center. The Stokes spectra were taken with the National
  Solar Observatory (NSO)/High Altitude Observatory Advanced Stokes
  Polarimeter (ASP). The NSO low-order adaptive optics system was
  used to record a data set of consistently high resolution. We find
  the following results from this analysis: (1) a strong correlation
  between the center-of-gravity (COG) velocity derived from the intensity
  profiles with the V-profile asymmetry; (2) the amplitude asymmetry
  is much more sensitive to changes in the COG velocity than the area
  asymmetry; and (3) plotting area versus amplitude asymmetry for the
  entire active region results in a bimodal distribution. Different
  areas within the active region, such as penumbra, umbra, light bridge,
  and small-scale fields outside the sunspot, are clearly separated
  in this plot. The light bridges and the small-scale magnetic fields
  surrounding the observed sunspot show larger amplitude asymmetry
  compared to the area asymmetry, whereas the penumbra shows larger
  area asymmetry. In comparison, the Stokes V spectra measured in
  the umbra show little area and amplitude asymmetry. In this paper,
  we use bisector analysis of the V intensity profile as a new tool to
  determine the gradients in the physical parameters in a more direct
  way. The gradients derived from the bisector method provide further
  and more direct evidence for the physical picture derived from the
  study of the asymmetries. For light bridges we find that the data is
  consistent with a picture of small convective cells confined to lower
  layers of the atmosphere. Asymmetries in the penumbra are caused by
  steep vertical gradients in the Evershed velocities in combination with
  the gradient in the line-of-sight inclination angle, confirming the
  earlier observations. For small-scale fields, the picture is consistent
  with the canopy effect. We also compare the average velocity and the
  magnetic field strength derived from this bisector analysis with the
  velocity and magnetic field strength derived from the ASP inversion and
  find excellent agreement between these independent methods. Apart from
  these asymmetries, we also observe extremely asymmetric V profiles, such
  as one-lobed profiles and multiple reversals, mostly at the edges of the
  limb-side penumbra. In these regions, we also find differences in the V
  profiles of λ6301.5 and λ6302.5 that suggest steep gradients in the
  physical parameters. The asymmetries derived from a single scan match
  well with the ones derived from the time-averaged properties obtained by
  averaging 14 such scans separated by 7.5 minutes. This suggests that,
  in a statistical sense, the Stokes V asymmetries do not vary with time
  and describe a global/general property of magnetic features found in
  regions such as light bridge, umbra, penumbra, and small-scale fields.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Small-scale topology of solar atmospheric dynamics. V. Acoustic
    events and internetwork grains
Authors: Hoekzema, N. M.; Rimmele, T. R.; Rutten, R. J.
2002A&A...390..681H    Altcode:
  We use high-quality observations from the Dunn Solar Telescope
  at NSO/Sacramento Peak to study spatio-temporal co-location of
  acoustic flux events in the photosphere and internetwork grains
  in the chromosphere. The events are diagnosed as sites with excess
  upward-propagating five-minute waves measured from Dopplergrams. The
  grains are repetitive bright internetwork features in simultaneous
  \CaII \KtwoV filtergrams. We find that the largest-flux sites in
  the granulation have appreciably larger than random probability to
  co-locate with exceptionally bright chromospheric internetwork grains,
  at an average delay of about two minutes which is likely to represent
  sound travel time to the chromosphere. This finding strengthens the
  case for acoustic grain excitation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Keller, C. U.; Rimmele, T. R.; Hill, F.; Keil, S. L.;
   Oschmann, J. M.; ATST Team
2002AN....323..294K    Altcode:
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope is the largest solar optical
  facility currently under development. The National Solar Observatory
  and its partners have just started the design and development phase
  with first light being planned for late this decade. The 4-m telescope
  will provide an angular resolution down to 0.025 arcsec, a large photon
  flux for precise magnetic and velocity field measurements, and access
  to a broad set of diagnostics from 0.3 to 28 mu m. We summarize the
  currently envisioned scientific capabilities of the telescope and its
  suite of instruments along with a glimpse at some of the early concepts.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Keil, S. L.; Keller, C. U.; Hill, F.;
   Oschmann, J. M.; Warner, M.; Dalrymple, N. E.; ATST Team
2002AAS...200.3408R    Altcode: 2002BAAS...34..691R
  The 4m aperture Advance Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be the
  most powerful solar telescope in the world and a unique scientific tool
  to study the Sun and other astronomical objects, such as planets. The
  ATST will replace major existing national solar facilities at the end
  of this decade. The ATST project has entered the design and development
  phase. We present an overview of the ATST science drivers and discuss
  preliminary design concepts and technical challenges. The ATST science
  goals lead to the following general requirements for the ATST facility:
  - Diffraction limited angular resolution in the visible and infrared
  to study fundamental astrophysical processes with unprecedented
  resolution enabling verification of model predictions. - A high photon
  flux for accurate measurements of physical parameters throughout
  the solar atmosphere, such as magnetic strength and direction,
  temperature and velocity. - Access to a new diagnostics at relatively
  unexplored infrared wavelength. - Low scattered light to enable
  coronal observations. - Low instrumental polarization for accurate
  measurements of magnetic fields. Development of a 4m solar telescope
  presents many technical challenges. The large aperture drives the ATST
  to an open-air design and makes thermal control of optics and telescope
  structure a paramount consideration. To achieve diffraction-limited
  observations at visible and infrared wavelength ATST will have a high
  order solar adaptive optics system. Coronal observations require,
  occulting in prime focus, a Lyot stop and contamination control of the
  primary. An initial set of instruments will be designed as integral
  part of the telescope. Preliminary telescope and instrument concepts
  will be discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Seeing Seven Ways From Sunday
Authors: Hill, F.; Balasubramaniam, K. S.; Beckers, J. M.; Briggs,
   J. W.; Hegwer, S.; Radick, R. R.; Rimmele, T. R.; Richards, K.;
   Denker, C.
2001AGUSM..SP21B03H    Altcode:
  The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) site survey will be
  carried out with a Solar Differential Image Motion Monitor (S-DIMM)
  and a six-scintillometer SHAdow BAnd Ranging (SHABAR) array. This
  device will provide estimates of the Fried parameter, R<SUB>0</SUB>,
  derived from the differential motion measurements of two images of the
  same cut across the solar limb formed by two 45 mm diameter telescope
  apertures 225 mm apart, and an estimate of the height dependence of the
  index of refraction structure parameter, C<SUB>n<SUP>2</SUP></SUB>, from
  the co-variance of the signals from an array of 6 scintillometers with
  15 baseline separations. It will also provide a cloud cover measurement
  and RMS scintillation signal. In preparation for the survey, we compare
  estimates of daytime solar seeing obtained simultaneously from seven
  different instruments. The observations were made at NSO/Sacramento
  Peak during the period January 26 - February 5, 2001 under a variety of
  seeing and transparency conditions ranging from poor to excellent. The
  seven instruments were: 1. a S-DIMM/SHABAR mounted at the top of
  the Dunn Solar Tower (DST) 2. an identical S-DIMM/SHABAR mounted at
  ground level 3. the NSO/SP Adaptive Optics wavefront sensor providing
  subaperature image motion measurements 4. a Dalsa camera providing
  bursts of high-speed images for spectral ratio seeing estimates 5. a
  Xedar camera obtaining granulation images for contrast and differential
  stretching measurements 6. a Seykora scintillometer mounted in the
  DST 7. a video camera recording a movie of the visual quality of the
  image The analysis of this data set will provide the first direct
  comparison of this many simultaneous solar seeing measurements, test
  the ATST site survey system, and verify the SHABAR measurement of the
  seeing height profile.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope -- Science Goals and
    Instrument Description.
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Keil, S. L.; Keller, C. U.; Hill, F.
2001AGUSM..SH31D08R    Altcode:
  High-resolution studies of the Sun's magnetic fields are needed for
  a better understanding of solar magnetic fields and the fundamental
  processes responsible for solar variability. The generation of magnetic
  fields through dynamo processes, the amplification of fields through
  the interaction with plasma flows, and the destruction of fields are
  still poorly understood. There is still incomplete insight as to what
  physical mechanisms are responsible for heating the corona, what causes
  variations in the radiative output of the Sun, and what mechanisms
  trigger flares and coronal mass ejections. Progress in answering
  these critical questions requires study of the interaction of the
  magnetic field and convection with a resolution sufficient to observe
  physical scales fundamental to these processes. The 4m aperture ATST
  will be a unique scientific tool, with excellent angular resolution,
  a large wavelength range, and low scattered light. With its integrated
  adaptive optics, the ATST will achieve a spatial resolution nearly 10
  times better than any existing solar telescope. The ATST will provide:
  <P />Unprecedented angular resolution of 0.03 arcsec in the visible and
  0.08 arcsec at 1.6 microns to enable us to clearly resolve and study the
  fundamental astrophysical processes on their intrinsic scales and to
  verify model predictions. A high photon flux for accurate and precise
  measurements of physical parameters, such as magnetic field strength
  and direction, temperature and velocity, on the short time scales
  involved. Access to a broad set of diagnostics, from visible to thermal
  infrared wavelengths. Low scattered light observations and coronagraphic
  capabilities in the infrared, allowing measurements of coronal magnetic
  fields. The ATST has been highly ranked by the latest Decadal Survey
  of Astronomy and Astrophysics and the NAS/NRC study of ground-based
  solar astronomy. A large part of the solar community will participate
  in the design and development of the ATST. A strawman telescope design,
  design challenges and instrument concepts will be discussed. Examples
  of recent high resolution observations with adaptive optics, that
  demonstrate the potential of this new technology will be shown.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Spectroscopic Observation of G-Band Bright Points
Authors: Langhans, K.; Schmidt, W.; Rimmele, T.; Sigwarth, M.
2001ASPC..236..439L    Altcode: 2001aspt.conf..439L
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Authors: Keil, S. L.; Rimmele, T. R.; Keller, C. U.; Atst Team
2001ASPC..236..597K    Altcode: 2001aspt.conf..597K
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A new Stokes Polarimeter for the Dunn Solar Telescope
Authors: Sigwarth, M.; Berst, C.; Gregory, S.; Hegwer, S.; Richards,
   K.; Rimmele, T.; Wilkins, L.; Lites, B. W.; Elmore, D. F.; Streander,
   K. V.
2001ASPC..236...57S    Altcode: 2001aspt.conf...57S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope: Science Goals and
    Instrument Description
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Keller, C.; Keil, S.; Hill, F.; Atst Team
2001AGM....18S1006R    Altcode:
  High-resolution studies of the Sun's magnetic fields are needed for
  a better understanding of solar magnetic fields and the fundamental
  processes responsible for solar variability. For example, the
  generation of magnetic fields through dynamo processes is still poorly
  understood. There is still incomplete insight as to what physical
  mechanisms are responsible for heating the corona, what causes
  variations in the radiative output of the Sun. Progress in answering
  these critical questions requires study of the interaction of the
  magnetic field and convection with a resolution sufficient to observe
  scales fundamental to these processes. The 4m aperture ATST will be
  a unique scientific tool, which will provide unprecedented angular
  resolution, high photon flux, access to a broad set of diagnostics,
  from visible to thermal infrared wavelengths, and low scattered light
  observations and coronagraphic capabilities in the infrared. Development
  of a 4-m solar telescope presents several technical challenges. The
  large heat flux makes thermal control of optics and telescope structure
  a paramount consideration. To achieve diffraction-limited performance,
  a powerful solar adaptive optics system is required. Low scattered
  light is essential for observing the corona but also to accurately
  measure the physical properties of small structures in, for example,
  sunspots. Contamination control of the primary and secondary mirrors
  must therefore be addressed. An initial set of instruments will be
  designed as integral part of the telescope during the upcoming design
  and development phase. A strawman telescope design and instrument
  concepts will be discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Advanced Solar Telescope
Authors: Keil, S. L.; Rimmele, T. R.; Keller, C.; Hill, F.
2000AAS...197.1710K    Altcode: 2000BAAS...32.1433K
  The planned Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) will be a 4-m
  aperture general-purpose solar telescope with integrated adaptive
  optics and versatile post focus instrumentation. The ATST will achieve
  an angular resolution of 0.03 arcsec (20 km on the solar surface)
  in the visible, which is almost an order of magnitude better than
  what is achieved with current solar telescopes. This will make it
  possible to resolve the fundamental astrophysical hydrodynamic and
  magnetohydrodynamic processes and structures in the solar atmosphere
  such as the building blocks of solar magnetic fields that are believed
  to be responsible for solar irradiance variations and the heating of the
  outer solar atmosphere. The ATST will cover the wavelength range from
  0.35 to 35 ?m and minimize scattered light. The initial set of post
  focus instruments will exploit the unique capabilities of the ATST to
  study magnetic fields at the highest spatial resolution in the visible
  and near-infrared parts of the spectrum. The ATST was highly recommended
  by the recent Decadal Study. A proposal for a four-year Design and
  Development phase has just been submitted to the NSF. Construction is
  expected to start in FY2005. The National Solar Observatory is operated
  by the Associated Universities for Research in Astronomy and is funded
  by the National Science Foundation under a cooperative agreement.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar adaptive optics
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.
2000SPIE.4007..218R    Altcode:
  High resolution observations of the Sun are of key importance
  in understanding fundamental astrophysical processes. Adaptive
  optics (AO) is an important tool that allows solar astronomers to
  achieve diffraction limited observations from existing ground based
  telescopes. AO is also a key technology required for a future 4m-class
  Advanced Solar Telescope (AST) that the international community of solar
  astronomers is planning to build. The history of the development of
  solar AO is reviewed and results from recent successful demonstrations
  of solar AO systems are presented. The main difference between solar
  AO and night time AO is the different, and more elaborate wavefront
  sensing technique that has to be applied in order to measure wavefront
  aberrations using solar granulation as a target. Different approaches
  to this problem are discussed. Multi-conjugate AO has been proposed as a
  technique to achieve diffraction limited resolution over a field-of-view
  (FOV) significantly larger than the isoplanatic patch. The Sun is an
  ideal object for the development and application of MCAO.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Dynamics of the Excitation of Solar Oscillations
Authors: Strous, Louis H.; Goode, Philip R.; Rimmele, Thomas R.
2000ApJ...535.1000S    Altcode:
  We investigate seismic events, bursts of seismic waves that are
  generated locally just below the solar surface and that we detect
  traveling up through the photosphere. We identify a few thousand
  seismic events by their traveling wave character and find that they
  are associated with continuum darkening and downflow and have an
  extent of on average about 10-15 minutes and 1 Mm. Their birth rate
  is about 8×10<SUP>-16</SUP> m<SUP>-2</SUP> s<SUP> -1</SUP>. The
  observed upwardly traveling seismic flux in the average event
  (as derived from velocities in the p-mode region of k-ω space) is
  followed after about 3 minutes by some reflected downward flux. Only
  a small fraction of the energy generated in the hypocenter of the
  event below the surface travels straight up for us to see. The bulk
  of the generated energy is directed or reflected downward, and is
  eventually transformed into p-modes. The seismic events at the surface
  contain about 1.5×10<SUP>19</SUP> J of seismic energy each, which
  corresponds to an average flux level of about 8.5 kW m<SUP>-2</SUP>
  over the whole surface. The total energy flow is likely more than an
  order of magnitude greater, and is then in the same ballpark as the
  estimate of Libbrecht for the power required to sustain the p-mode
  spectrum. We find a roughly linear relation between the peak seismic
  flux and the peak downward convective velocity associated with each
  seismic event, which does not fit the highly nonlinear relations found
  theoretically by Lighthill and Goldreich &amp; Kumar for stochastic
  excitation by turbulent convection, but does fit the monopole source
  deduced by Nigam &amp; Kosovichev from a study of the p-mode spectrum.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High resolution spectroscopy of active regions with adaptive
    optic
Authors: Sigwarth, M.; Rimmele, T. R.
2000SPD....31.0304S    Altcode: 2000BAAS...32R.834S
  With the NSO low-order adaptive optic system at the NSO Dunn Solar
  Telescope it is now possible to perform spectroscopic measurements
  at high angular resolution and high signal-to-noise level. The
  performance of the AO system for spectroscopic investigations will be
  demonstrated. By using a dual Fabry-Perot spectrometer we obtained
  spectral line scans of active regions with a spatial resolution
  of 0.3 arcsec at 557nm. We use these data to adress questions of
  magnetoconvection in active regions. This work is supported by NSO/AURA

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evolution of small-scale magnetic fields from combined adaptive
    optics and phase-diverse speckle imaging
Authors: Keller, C. U.; Rimmele, T. R.; Paxman, R. G.; Seldin, J. H.;
   Carrara, D.; Gleichman, K.
2000SPD....31.0301K    Altcode: 2000BAAS...32..833K
  We have obtained movies of the photospheric magnetic field at a
  sustained resolution of 0.2 arcsec by combining the adaptive optics
  system at the Dunn Solar Telescope with the Zurich Imaging Polarimeter I
  (ZIMPOL) and processing the data with Phase-Diverse Speckle Imaging and
  speckle deconvolution. The adaptive optics was correcting the low-order
  aberrations with an update rate of about 1.5 kHz and fed a narrow-band
  channel through the Universal Birefringent Filter in the wing of the CaI
  610.3 nm line and two white-light channels that were used to obtain one
  in-focus and one out-of-focus image for the phase-diversity processing,
  which removes the remaining aberrations. All three channels were
  equipped with ZIMPOL I cameras running simultaneously at 5 frames
  per second. The narrow-band intensity and magnetogram images were
  reconstructed using speckle deconvolution. This combined attack to
  obtain the best magnetogram movies of the solar surface was very
  successful and led to spectacular time sequences with a consistent
  spatial resolution of better than 0.2 arcsec. We will present the
  first scientific results on the evolution of the small-scale magnetic
  fields in an active region. This work was supported by the National
  Science Foundation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Deconvolution of narrowband solar images using aberrations
    estimated from phase-diverse imagery
Authors: Seldin, John H.; Paxman, Richard G.; Carrara, David A.;
   Keller, Christoph U.; Rimmele, Thomas R.
1999SPIE.3815..155S    Altcode:
  Phase-Diverse Speckle (PDS) is a short-exposure data- collection and
  processing technique that blends phase- diversity and speckle-imaging
  concepts. PDS has been successfully used for solar astronomy to achieve
  near diffraction-limited resolution in ground-based imaging of solar
  granulation. Variants of PDS that involve narrow-band, spectroscopic,
  and polarimetric data provide more information observations. We
  present results from processing data collected with the 76-cm Richard
  B. Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) on Sacramento Peak, NM. Three-channel
  data sets consisting of a pair of phase-diverse images of the solar
  continuum and a narrow-band image were collected over spans of 15 - 20
  minutes. Point-spread functions that are estimated from the PDS data are
  used in a multi-frame deconvolution algorithm to correct the narrow-band
  imagery. The data were processed into a number of time series. A rare,
  short-lived continuum bright point with a peak intensity at a factor
  of 2.1 above the mean intensity in the continuum was observed in one
  such sequence. The field of view spans multiple isoplanatic patches,
  and strategies for processing these large fields were developed. We will
  discuss these methods along with other techniques that were explored
  for accelerating the processing. Finally, we show the first PDS
  reconstruction of adaptive-optics (AO) compensated solar granulation
  taken at the DST. As expected, we find that these data are less
  aberrated and, thus, the use of AO in future experiments is planned.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The NSO Solar Adaptive Optics Program: First Results.
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Radick, R. R.; Richards, K.; Dunn, R. B.
1999AAS...19410307R    Altcode: 1999BAAS...31Q1002R
  The National Solar Observatory is developing solar adaptive optics at
  the R.B. Dunn Solar Telescope (DST). The project recently achieved
  a key milestone when the atmospheric control loop was closed at the
  DST. The system currently compensates about 20 spatial modes with a
  loop bandwidth of about 30 Hz. A 97-actuator deformable mirror is used
  for wavefront correction. A correlating Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor
  provides real-time estimates of the wavefront errors using arbitrary
  scenes, such as solar granulation and small pores, as the wavefront
  sensing target. We will describe the system design and present results
  from first engineering runs at the DST.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Granular Magnetic Fields of the Quiet Sun
Authors: Lin, Haosheng; Rimmele, Thomas
1999ApJ...514..448L    Altcode:
  We report new observations that combine high-precision infrared
  polarimetry and high-resolution imagery in the visible to demonstrate
  that most of the quiet solar surface contains a measurable
  magnetic field. We found that when observed at 1 arcsec<SUP>2</SUP>
  resolution, 68% of the observed area contains magnetic flux higher
  than 5×10<SUP>15</SUP> Mx (corresponding to an apparent average field
  of 1 G). The majority of these magnetic features have magnetic flux
  below 5×10<SUP>16</SUP> Mx. Their magnetic field strengths range
  from below 200 to 1000 G, which means that their filling factors
  are on the order of 1%. The spatial distribution and time evolution
  of these magnetic features are closely associated with the solar
  granulation. The properties of these weak granular magnetic features
  we observed differ from those of the intranetwork fields described in
  earlier observations. We also observed the formation and disappearance
  of a kilogauss magnetic feature associated with the development of
  intergranular lanes, which may be evidence of convective collapse.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High Resolution Solar Physics: Theory, Observations, and
    Techniques
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Balasubramaniam, K. S.; Radick, R. R.
1999ASPC..183.....R    Altcode: 1999hrsp.conf.....R
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Adaptive Optics at the National Solar Observatory
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Dunn, R.; Richards, K.; Radick, R.
1999ASPC..183..222R    Altcode: 1999hrsp.conf..222R
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Excitation of Solar Oscillations -- Observations and
    Simulations
Authors: Goode, P.; Strous, L.; Rimmele, T.; Stein, R.; Nordlund, Å.
1999ASPC..183..456G    Altcode: 1999hrsp.conf..456G
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Excitation of Solar Oscillations
Authors: Strous, Louis H.; Goode, Philip R.; Rimmele, Thomas R.
1999soho....9E..81S    Altcode:
  We investigate seismic events, bursts of seismic waves that are
  generated locally just below the solar surface and that we detect
  travelling up through the photosphere. We identify 646 seismic events,
  which are associated with intergranular lanes and have an extent
  of on average about 10 minutes and 3 Mm. Their birth rate is about
  10-16 m-2 s-1. The observed upwardly travelling seismic flux in the
  average event (as derived from velocities in the p-mode region of
  k-omega space) is followed after about 5 minutes by some reflected
  downward flux. Only some of the energy generated in the hypocenter of
  the event below the surface travels up for us to see. We propose that
  this energy is converted into surface (f-mode-like) waves, while the
  unseen, initially downward going energy is eventually transformed
  into p-modes. The seismic events at the surface contain about 5 *
  1019 J of seismic energy each, which corresponds to an average
  flux level of about 4 kW/m2 over the whole surface. The initially
  downward directed energy flow is likely substantially greater, and
  is then in the same ballpark as the estimate of Libbrecht (1988) for
  the power required to sustain the p-mode spectrum. We find a roughly
  linear relation between the peak seismic flux and the peak downward
  convective velocity associated with each seismic event, which is
  not equal to the v8 relation found theoretically by Lighthill (1952)
  for stochastic excitation by turbulent convection.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Nineteenth NSO/SP International Workshop on High-Resolution
Solar Physics:Theory, Observations, and Techniques
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas; Balasubramaniam, K. S.; Radick, Richard
1999PASP..111..127R    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Image improvement program at the NSO/SP Vacuum Tower Solar
    Telescope
Authors: Radick, Richard R.; Rimmele, Thomas R.; Dunn, Richard B.
1998SPIE.3353..621R    Altcode:
  Over the past several years, a number of steps have been taken to
  improve the optical performance of the Vacuum Tower Solar Telescope at
  Sacramento Peak. We believe that the optical system of the telescope
  is now corrected to better than 1/10 wave rms after these improvements.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Deconvolving solar images using a Shack-Hartmann wavefront
    sensor
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; Radick, Richard R.
1998SPIE.3353.1014R    Altcode:
  Deconvolution from wavefront sensing (DWFS) is an image reconstruction
  technique that can be used as an alternative to phase diversity
  or speckle reconstruction techniques for observations of extended
  objects. A correlating Shack- Hartmann wavefront sensor was used to
  measure the instantaneous wavefront. The wavefront information was then
  used to deconvolve simultaneously taken solar images. The main objective
  of this experiment was to validate the correlating Shack-Hartmann
  wavefront sensor approach for solar adaptive optics. Several series
  of short exposure images and simultaneous wavefront sensor data were
  collected at the Vacuum Tower Telescope at Sacramento Peak. We produced
  a series of reconstructions of solar features, including granulation,
  pores and sunspots. We show that consistent result can be achieved
  using DWFS. Reconstructed images of the same object but observed at
  slightly different times, i.e. different atmospheric realizations,
  are nearly identical.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar adaptive optics at the National Solar Observatory
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; Radick, Richard R.
1998SPIE.3353...72R    Altcode:
  The National Solar Observatory at Sacramento Peak is developing adaptive
  optics (AO) for solar astronomy. We are currently implementing a low
  order adaptive optics system that will correct approximately 20 Zernike
  modes. The system design permits future expansion future expansion
  to about 80 Zernike modes. We are using a correlating Shack-Hartmann
  wavefront sensor. Since a point source is generally not available on
  the sun, wavefront tilts have to be derived by applying correlation
  techniques to images of extended objects, such as granulation, probes
  and sunspots.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: EUV Spectroscopy of the Sunspot Region NOAA 7981 Using SOHO -
    II. Velocities and Line Profiles
Authors: Brynildsen, N.; Brekke, P.; Fredvik, T.; Haugan, S. V. H.;
   Kjeldseth-Moe, O.; Maltby, P.; Harrison, R. A.; Pike, C. D.; Rimmele,
   T.; Thompson, W. T.; Wilhelm, K.
1998SoPh..179..279B    Altcode:
  We have studied the dynamics in the sunspot transition region between
  the chromosphere and the corona and investigated the extension of
  the flow field into the corona. Based on EUV spectra of a medium size
  sunspot and its surroundings, NOAA 7981, observed with CDS and SUMER
  on SOHO, we derive line-of-sight velocities and study the line profiles
  for a series of emission lines.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Extreme-Ultraviolet Sunspot Plumes Observed with SOHO
Authors: Maltby, P.; Brynildsen, N.; Brekke, P.; Haugan, S. V. H.;
   Kjeldseth-Moe, O.; Wikstøl, Ø.; Rimmele, T.
1998ApJ...496L.117M    Altcode: 1998astro.ph..1144M
  Bright EUV sunspot plumes have been observed in five out of nine sunspot
  regions with the Coronal Diagnostic Spectrometer on the Solar and
  Heliospheric Observatory. In the other four regions, the brightest line
  emissions may appear inside the sunspot but are mainly concentrated in
  small regions outside the sunspot areas. These results are in contrast
  to those obtained during the Solar Maximum Mission but are compatible
  with the Skylab mission results. The present observations show that
  sunspot plumes are formed in the upper part of the transition region,
  occur in both magnetic unipolar and bipolar regions, and may extend
  from the umbra into the penumbra.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: EUV Spectroscopy of the Sunspot Region NOAA 7981 Using SOHO -
    I. Line Emission and Time Dependence
Authors: Brynildsen, N.; Brekke, P.; Fredvik, T.; Haugan, S. V. H.;
   Kjeldseth-Moe, O.; Maltby, P.; Harrison, R. A.; Pike, C. D.; Rimmele,
   T.; Thompson, W. T.; Wilhelm, K.
1998SoPh..179...43B    Altcode:
  EUV spectra of a medium-size sunspot and its surroundings, NOAA 7981,
  were obtained on 2 August 1996 with the Coronal Diagnostic Spectrometer
  (CDS) and the Solar Ultraviolet Measurements of Emitted Radiation
  (SUMER) on the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). The spectral
  lines formed in the transition region and corona show considerable
  structure and large deviations from a uniform spatial distribution over
  the active region. Enhanced EUV emissions in transition region lines
  are concentrated in small regions outside the umbra of the sunspot
  throughout most of the observing sequence. Only during a short,
  active period do we find an enhanced line emission that reaches into
  the umbra. Preliminary values for the umbral intensity are given.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the Origin of Solar Oscillations
Authors: Goode, Philip R.; Strous, Louis H.; Rimmele, Thomas R.;
   Stebbins, Robin T.
1998ApJ...495L..27G    Altcode: 1998astro.ph..1008G
  We have made high-resolution observations of the Sun in which we
  identify individual sunquakes and see power from these seismic events
  being pumped into the resonant modes of vibration of the Sun. A typical
  event lasts about 5 minutes. We report the physical properties of
  the events and relate them to theories of the excitation of solar
  oscillations. We also discuss the local seismic potential of these
  events.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Three Dimensional EUV Imaging of Sunspot Regions Observed
    with SOHO
Authors: Brynildsen, N.; Brekke, P.; Haugan, S. V. H.; Kjeldseth-Moe,
   O.; Maltby, P.; Harrison, R. A.; Rimmele, T.; Wilhelm, K.
1998ASPC..155..171B    Altcode: 1998sasp.conf..171B
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evidence for Magnetoconvection in a Sunspot Light Bridge
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.
1997ApJ...490..458R    Altcode:
  We study a time sequence of the velocity field measured in a sunspot
  light bridge classified as photospheric. The data provide clear
  evidence for a convective origin of the photospheric light-bridge
  phenomenon. Furthermore, the data strongly indicate that a form of
  oscillatory magnetoconvection is the physical process responsible
  for the formation of the observed light bridge. We observe umbral
  dots and find in them a very small upward velocity of order 50 m
  s<SUP>-1</SUP>. Both the intensity and the velocity signal vary in
  time. Some umbral dots fade over a period of about 15-20 minutes and
  then reappear at the same location. In the particular sunspot observed,
  umbral dots give the impression of being aligned in lanes that appear
  to separate individual flux fragments within the umbra.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High Resolution Solar Observations from the Ground
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Beckers, J.; Dunn, R.; Radick, R.; Roeser, M.
1997hrsa.rept.....R    Altcode:
  We describe an ongoing effort to improve the capabilities for achieving
  spectroscopic and imaging observations at the highest spatial resolution
  at the Sacramento Peak Vacuum Tower Telescope of the National Solar
  Observatory. We report on improvements of the optical performance of the
  VTT/SP and describe results from the first solar active optics system,
  which was recently successfully tested at the VTT/SP. Our final goal is
  the implementation of solar adaptive optics at the VTT/SP. We describe
  progress and future plans of the adaptive optics program.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Progress in Active Optics at the NSO/SP Vacuum Tower Telescope
Authors: Radick, Richard R.; Rimmele, Thomas R.
1997SPD....28.1504R    Altcode: 1997BAAS...29..919R
  About a year ago, NSO/SP and PL/GPSS jointly began the development
  of an active optics system for the Vacuum Tower Telescope at Sac
  Peak. Although the immediate objective of this project is to provide a
  system for sensing and correcting the slowly varying aberrations in the
  optical system of the VTT/SP, the system is also intended to provide
  a platform for further development of low order adaptive optics and
  ultimately a full atmospheric compensation system for use in solar
  imaging. A correlating Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor, capable of
  using solar granulation as its target, and a 97-actuator deformable
  mirror, manufactured by Xinetics, Inc., are the key components of
  the new system. During March, 1997, the control loop was closed for
  the first time at the VTT, and the ability of the wavefront sensor to
  function using both small sunspots and granulation was successfully
  demonstrated. Further performance and optimization tests at the VTT
  are scheduled for May. We will report the results.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High Resolution Observations of Magnetic Elements in the
    Visible and the Infrared
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Lin, H.
1997SPD....28.0248R    Altcode: 1997BAAS...29..901R
  High resolution observations of magnetic elements in the visible and
  infrared. We report on multi-wavelength observations of plage regions
  obtained at the Vacuum Tower Telescope at NSO/Sac-Peak . The data
  set includes high resolution images in the G-band (0.43 mu ), the
  visible (0.69 mu ) continuum and the infrared (1.6 mu ) continuum. In
  addition, deep integration full Stokes vector measurements in the FeI
  1.56 mu lines, as well as, Ca-K slit jaw images were obtained. G-band
  bright points, which are observed mostly in supergranular lanes, are
  also visible as bright points in the visible continuum. Although the
  infrared observations are limited in spatial resolution to about 0."4
  (the diffraction limit of the VTT/SP), the data indicates that G-band
  bright points are also bright in the infrared (1.6 mu ). We also discuss
  and compare properties of magnetic knots and small pores. Magnetic
  knots, which recently also have been referred to as azimuth centers
  (Lites et al. 1994), by definition show no darkening in individual
  continuum images. However, in the time-averaged imaging data, and in
  particular in the infrared, azimuth centers appear as dark features,
  which are clearly distinguishable from the quiet sun background. In
  the infrared most azimuth centers are visible as dark features even
  in individual snapshots. Many azimuth centers as well as some small
  pores are surrounded by a highly structured bright ring, which becomes
  more apparent with increasing height of formation. Results of the
  polarization analysis in the FeI 1.56 mu lines, including measurements
  of weak fields, are presented as well.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Non-Uniformity in the Sunspot Transition Region
Authors: Brynildsen, N.; Brekke, P.; Fredvik, T.; Haugan, S. V. H.;
   Kjeldseth-Moe, O.; Maltby, P.; Harrison, R. A.; Rimmele, T.;
   Wilhelm, K.
1997ESASP.404..257B    Altcode: 1997cswn.conf..257B
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Transition Region Velocities and Line Profiles in the Sunspot
    Region 7981
Authors: Brynildsen, N.; Brekke, P.; Fredvik, T.; Haugan, S. V. H.;
   Kjeldseth-Moe, O.; Maltby, P.; Harrison, R. A.; Pike, C. D.; Rimmele,
   T. Thompson, W. T.; Wilhelm, K.
1997ESASP.404..251B    Altcode: 1997cswn.conf..251B
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: EUV Line Emission and Time Dependence in the Sunspot Region
    NOAA 7981
Authors: Brynildsen, N.; Brekke, P.; Fredvik, T.; Haugan, S. V. H.;
   Kjeldseth-Moe, O.; Maltby, P.; Harrison, R. A.; Pike, C. D.; Rimmele,
   T.; Thompson, W. T.; Wilhelm, K.
1997ESASP.404..245B    Altcode: 1997cswn.conf..245B
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Limitations Placed on the Time Coverage, Isoplanatic Patch
    Size and Exposure Time for Solar Observations Using Image Selection
    Procedures in the Presence of Telescope Aberrations
Authors: Beckers, J. M.; Rimmele, T. R.
1996AAS...189.4209B    Altcode: 1996BAAS...28.1325B
  Image selection, adaptive optics and post-facto image restoration
  methods are all techniques being used for diffraction limited imaging
  with ground-based solar and stellar telescopes. Often these techniques
  are used in a hybrid form like e.g. the application of adaptive optics
  and/or post-facto image restoration in combination with already good
  images obtained by image selection in periods of good seeing. Fried
  (JOSA 56, 1372, 1966), Hecquet and Coupinot (J. Optics/Paris 16, 21,
  1985) and Beckers ("Solar and Stellar Granulation", Kluwer, Rutten
  &amp; Severino Eds, 55, 1988) already discussed the usefulness of
  image selection, or the "Lucky Observer" mode, for high resolution
  imaging. All assumed perfect telescope optics. In case of moderate
  telescope aberrations image selection can still lead to diffraction
  limited imaging but only when the atmospheric wavefront aberration
  happens to compensate that of the telescope. In this "Very Lucky
  Observer" mode the probability of obtaining a good image is reduced
  over the un-aberrated case, as are the size of the isoplanatic patch
  and the exposure time. We describe an analysis of these effects for
  varying telescope aberrations. These result in a strong case for the
  removal of telescope aberrations either by initial implementation or
  by the use of slow active optics.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Image Quality Improvements at the NSO/Sacramento Peak Vacuum
    Tower Telescope
Authors: Radick, R. R.; Dunn, R. B.; Rimmele, T. R.; Stauffer, F. R.;
   Wilkins, L. M.
1996AAS...188.8503R    Altcode: 1996BAAS...28..961R
  Recently, an effort has been underway at NSO/Sacramento Peak to improve
  the imaging performance of the vacuum tower solar telescope (VTT) by
  identifying, characterizing, and correcting optical problems in the
  system. Considerable attention has been given to thermal control of
  the entrance window to alleviate focus changes and other time-varying
  aberrations in the wavefront, and development of a second generation
  solar correlation tracker, based on commercially available components,
  to eliminate tip-tilt image motion. We are also refiguring one of the
  45deg turning flats in the telescope turret, primarily to eliminate
  a turned edge that introduces astigmatism. In the next year, we
  plan to implement a low-bandwidth active optics system, based on
  a workstation-hosted Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor, generalized
  to operate using solar granulation as its target, and a 97 element
  deformable mirror, recently purchased from Xinetics Inc. with Air
  Force and NSO funds, to correct any remaining residual aberrations in
  the VTT optical system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Wavefront Sensing for Solar Adaptive Optics
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Dunn, R. B.; Radick, R. R.
1996AAS...188.8504R    Altcode: 1996BAAS...28..962R
  The National Solar Observatory is developing an adaptive optics
  system with the goal to correct atmospheric aberrations in real time
  and allow for diffraction limited observations of solar features. A
  key component of the AO system is the wavefront sensor (WFS). The Sun
  presents unusual problems for wavefront sensing. Unlike the nighttime
  sky, the Sun does not provide natural, high-contrast point sources,
  and creation of laser beacons bright enough to be visible against the
  solar disk poses major technical and operational problems. Wavefront
  sensing at arbitrary locations on the Sun requires a sensor capable of
  using the solar granulation as its target. We discuss two approaches
  to the solar wavefront sensing problem: (a) a modified Shack-Hartmann
  sensor, which is based on correlation tracking on images formed by
  an array of subapertures , and (b) an amplitude modulation or spatial
  filtering procedure, understandable in terms of the classic Foucault
  knife-edge test. We compare measurements of atmospheric wavefront
  distortions performed simultaneously with a Shack-Hartmann WFS and a
  knife-edge WFS. We discuss the performance, limitations and practical
  considerations of the two wavefront sensor concepts.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Using Scintillation Measurements to Achieve High Spatial
    Resolution in Photometric Solar Observations
Authors: Coulter, R.; Kuhn, J. R.; Rimmele, T.
1996SoPh..163....7C    Altcode:
  The RISE/PSPT (`Radiative Inputs from the Sun to the Earth/Precision
  Solar Photometric Telescopes') experiment will attain high differential
  photometric precision in full-disk solar images with 1 arc sec
  pixels. To achieve this spatial resolution it will be necessary to
  use frame selection techniques to minimize the effects of atmospheric
  `seeing'. We report here on experiments to use a simple scintillation
  monitor as a trigger or `veto' for imaging observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evidence for thin elevated evershed channels.
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.
1995A&A...298..260R    Altcode:
  We report on analysis of sunspot observations carried out with a narrow
  band (20mA) filter and present evidence that the Evershed effect is
  confined to thin loop-like structures which are elevated above the
  continuum height over most parts of the penumbra. The vertical extent
  of these loop structures is limited to approximately one photospheric
  scale height. The footpoints of these loop structures become visible
  in the velocity maps representing the deep photosphere and their
  sizes are &lt;=0.5". The position of Evershed velocity filaments
  are well correlated with dark filaments seen in intensity maps,
  provided intensity and velocity signals compared originate from
  the same height in the photosphere. The continuum intensity and
  the velocity derived from the core shift of lines formed in the low
  photosphere show a significant correlation. However, no significant
  correlation is found between the continuum intensity and the velocity
  derived from the core shift of spectral lines of medium strength (FeI
  5576 A) formed in the upper photosphere. The line profiles measured in
  Evershed velocity filaments show enhanced equivalent width and enhanced
  full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM), indicating that a significant amount
  of microturbulence is present. We observe systematic differences in
  the inclination angle of the magnetic field vector between dark and
  bright filaments. Dark filaments are nearly horizontal while in bright
  filaments the field vector is more vertical with respect to the solar
  surface. The magnetic field strength shows little variation between
  dark and bright filaments. In penumbral grains, we observe a small
  upward motion on the order 100-200m/s. The line profile in bright
  penumbral structures is nearly symmetric, in contrast to the strongly
  asymmetric profile found in dark filaments.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dark Lanes in Granulation and the Excitation of Solar
    Oscillations
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.; Goode, P. R.; Strous, L. H.; Stebbins, R. T.
1995ESASP.376b.329R    Altcode: 1995help.confP.329R; 1995soho....2..329R
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dark Lanes in Granulation and the Excitation of Solar
    Oscillations
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.; Goode, Philip R.; Harold, Elliotte;
   Stebbins, Robin T.
1995ApJ...444L.119R    Altcode:
  We made simultaneous, high-resolution observations of the Sun's
  granulation and solar acoustic events in the photosphere. We find that
  the acoustic events, which are a local by-product of the excitation
  of solar oscillations (Goode, Gough, &amp; Kosovichev 1992), occur
  preferentially in the dark, intergranular lanes. At the site of
  a typical acoustic event the local granulation becomes darker over
  several minutes leading up to the event with a further, abrupt darkening
  immediately preceding the peak of the event. Further, the stronger
  the acoustic event the darker the granulation. Thus, the excitation of
  solar oscillations seems more closely associated with the rapid cooling
  occurring in the upper convection layer, rather than the overshooting of
  turbulent convection itself. We find no substantial role for so-called
  'exploding' granules in the excitation of solar oscillations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Sun Center Observations of the Evershed Effect
Authors: Rimmele, Thomas R.
1995ApJ...445..511R    Altcode:
  Results of observations of the Evershed effect for a round sunspot
  at disk center are presented. Using the 20 mA UBF/FP filter at the
  VTT of NSO/Sacramento Peak we recorded a 2 hr time sequence of Fe I
  5576.099 A velocity maps, Mn I 5394.675 A core intensity maps, and
  white-light images. By computing the 2 hr time average we were able to
  filter out the vertical Evershed component of a few hundred m/s from
  the background of oscillatory and granular velocities, which dominate
  individual images. The averaged velocity fields show distinct filaments
  which extend beyond the white-light boundary of the sunspot by as far as
  10,000 km. The velocity profile along these filaments is consistent with
  the picture of an arched magnetic loop carrying the Evershed flow. These
  loops reach their maximum elevation at less than 300 km above continuum
  height. The portions of the loops seen in velocity maps have a length
  of up to 20,000 km. Within the penumbra the velocity filaments are
  correlated with dark filaments observed in the core intensity map of
  the temperature-sensitive Mn I line. However, beyond the penumbral
  boundary the same velocity filaments coincide with enhanced brightness,
  relative to the photospheric intensity, suggesting that the gas in
  the downstream legs of the loop is at a higher temperature than the
  surrounding photospheric material. The temperature excess in the
  downstream legs is of the order of 200 K. A possible explanation is
  a standing tube shock that occurs in the downstream legs and near the
  penumbral boundary as modeled by Montesinos &amp; Thomas (1993). Some
  velocity filaments end in pore-like features which are 5%-10% darker
  than the average photosphere and reveal a pronounced redshift.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Restored Solar Velocity Measurements Obtained from the May 10,
    1994 Annular Solar Eclipse
Authors: Keil, S. L.; Balasubramaniam, K. S.; Ljungberg, S. K.;
   Smaldone, L. A.; Rimmele, T. R.
1995SPD....26..202K    Altcode: 1995BAAS...27..951K
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: CLEAR : A Concept for a "Coronagraph and Low Emissivity
    Astronomical Reflector" for Solar and Nighttime Observations
Authors: Beckers, J. M.; Kuhn, J.; Neidig, D.; Rabin, R.; Rimmele,
   T.; Smartt, R. N.
1995SPD....26..722B    Altcode: 1995BAAS...27..971B
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Photospheric Wave Behavior
Authors: Stebbins, R. T.; Rimmele, T. R.; Goode, P. R.
1995ASPC...76..354S    Altcode: 1995gong.conf..354S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observations of Evolving Solar Magnetic Features in the
    Infrared and Visible Spectrum
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Schmidt, W.
1995itsa.conf..363R    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the temporal behaviour of the Evershed effect.
Authors: Rimmele, T. R.
1994A&A...290..972R    Altcode:
  We present the results of high resolution observations of the Evershed
  effect, with emphasis on the variation of the Evershed velocities in
  time. Using a tunable narrow band filter we recorded time sequences of
  the two dimensional penumbral velocity field. The Evershed velocities
  are clearly non-stationary. Velocity packets are observed propagating
  radially outward towards the penumbral boundary and into the adjacent
  quiet photosphere. The propagation speed ranges from 2 to 5.5km/s, with
  an average of 3.2+/-1.1km/s. This pattern repeats in a quasi periodic
  way on a time scale of order 15 min. Subsequent velocity packets are
  separated in space by =~2000-3000km in the radial direction. At a
  photospheric height of =~160km we measure an average maximum Doppler
  velocity of 4.7+/-0.6km/s. The Doppler velocity seems to have less
  variance than propagation speed of the moving velocity features. Both
  wave phenomena and transient siphon flows are discussed as possible
  explanations for the observed time dependence of the Evershed effect. On
  a time scale of 1h we find no observational evidence for the proposed
  interchange convection process.

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Title: The Evershed effect: a wave phenomenon?
Authors: Rimmele, T.
1994smf..conf..176R    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

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Title: High Resolution Observations with NSO/KIS Correlation Tracker
Authors: Rimmele, T.; Kentischer, T.; Wiborg, P.
1993rtpf.conf...24R    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS