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  1. Schmidt, Dirk ; Schreiber, Laura ; Vernet, Elise (Ed.)
    As part of the Keck All-sky Precision Adaptive optics (KAPA) project a laser Asterism Generator (AG) is being implemented on the Keck I telescope. The AG provides four Laser Guide Stars (LGS) to the Keck Adaptive Optics (AO) system by splitting a single 22W laser beam into four beams of equal intensity. We present the design and implementation of the AG for KAPA. We discuss the optical design and layout, the details of the mechanical design and fabrication, and the challenges of designing the assembly to fit into the limited available space on the Keck telescope. 
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  2. Schmidt, Dirk ; Schreiber, Laura ; Vernet, Elise (Ed.)
    We present evaluations of the Keck Telescope’s adaptive optics (AO) performance on Milky Way Galactic center imaging and spectroscopic observations using three different AO setups: laser guide star with infrared (IR) tip-tilt correction, laser guide star with visible tip-tilt correction, and infrared natural guide star with a pyramid wavefront sensor. Observations of the Galactic Center can utilize a bright IR tip-tilt star (K′ = 7.4 mag) for corrections, which is over 10 arcseconds closer than the optical tip-tilt star. The proximity of this IR star enables the comparison of the aforementioned AO configurations. We present performance metrics such as full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM), Strehl ratio, and spectral signal to noise ratio and their relations to atmospheric seeing conditions. The IR tip-tilt star decreases the median spatial FWHM by 31% in imaging data and 30% in spectroscopy. Median Strehl for imaging data improves by 24%. Additionally, the IR star removes the seeing dependence from differential tip-tilt error in both imaging and spectroscopic data. This evaluation provides important work for ongoing upgrades to AO systems, such as the Keck All sky Precision Adaptive Optics (KAPA) upgrade on the Keck I Telescope, and the development of new AO systems for extremely large telescopes. 
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  3. Abstract

    We present Keck Planet Imager and Characterizer (KPIC) high-resolution (R∼35,000)K-band thermal emission spectroscopy of the ultrahot Jupiter WASP-33b. The use of KPIC’s single-mode fibers greatly improves both blaze and line-spread stabilities relative to slit spectrographs, enhancing the cross-correlation detection strength. We retrieve the dayside emission spectrum with a nested-sampling pipeline, which fits for orbital parameters, the atmospheric pressure–temperature profile, and the molecular abundances. We strongly detect the thermally inverted dayside and measure mass-mixing ratios for CO (logCOMMR=1.10.6+0.4), H2O (logH2OMMR=4.10.9+0.7), and OH (logOHMMR=2.11.1+0.5), suggesting near-complete dayside photodissociation of H2O. The retrieved abundances suggest a carbon- and possibly metal-enriched atmosphere, with a gas-phase C/O ratio of0.80.2+0.1, consistent with the accretion of high-metallicity gas near the CO2snow line and post-disk migration or with accretion between the soot and H2O snow lines. We also find tentative evidence for12CO/13CO ∼ 50, consistent with values expected in protoplanetary disks, as well as tentative evidence for a metal-enriched atmosphere (2–15 × solar). These observations demonstrate KPIC’s ability to characterize close-in planets and the utility of KPIC’s improved instrumental stability for cross-correlation techniques.

     
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 27, 2024
  4. Schmidt, Dirk ; Schreiber, Laura ; Vernet, Elise (Ed.)
    We calculate an optical distortion solution for the OSIRIS Imager on the Keck I telescope, by matching observations of globular clusters to a Hubble reference catalogue. This solution can be applied to correct astrometric distortions in OSIRIS frames, improving the astrometric accuracy of observations. We model the distortion with a 5th order Legendre polynomial. The distortion we find matches the expected OSIRIS distortion, and has a fit error of 0.6 mas, but has large residuals of 7 mas. We are currently iterating on an improved reference frame to improve the residual. Additionally, we have installed the Precision Calibration Unit (PCU) on the Keck I optical bench, which will generates an artificial grid of stars for use in future distortion calculations. 
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  5. Schmidt, Dirk ; Schreiber, Laura ; Vernet, Elise (Ed.)
    The Keck All-Sky Precision Adaptive Optics (KAPA) system project will upgrade the Keck I AO system to enable laser tomography with a four laser guide star (LGS) asterism. This paper describes the new infrastructure which is being built for daytime calibration and testing of the KAPA tomographic algorithms. 
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  6. Abstract

    M dwarfs are common host stars to exoplanets but often lack atmospheric abundance measurements. Late-M dwarfs are also good analogs to the youngest substellar companions, which share similarTeff∼ 2300–2800 K. We present atmospheric analyses for the M7.5 companion HIP 55507 B and its K6V primary star with Keck/KPIC high-resolution (R∼ 35,000)K-band spectroscopy. First, by including KPIC relative radial velocities between the primary and secondary in the orbit fit, we improve the dynamical mass precision by 60% and findMB=88.03.2+3.4MJup, putting HIP 55507 B above the stellar–substellar boundary. We also find that HIP 55507 B orbits its K6V primary star witha=383+4au ande= 0.40 ± 0.04. From atmospheric retrievals of HIP 55507 B, we measure [C/H] = 0.24 ± 0.13, [O/H] = 0.15 ± 0.13, and C/O = 0.67 ± 0.04. Moreover, we strongly detect13CO (7.8σsignificance) and tentatively detectH218O(3.7σsignificance) in the companion’s atmosphere and measure12CO/13CO=9822+28andH216O/H218O=24080+145after accounting for systematic errors. From a simplified retrieval analysis of HIP 55507 A, we measure12CO/13CO=7916+21andC16O/C18O=28870+125for the primary star. These results demonstrate that HIP 55507 A and B have consistent12C/13C and16O/18O to the <1σlevel, as expected for a chemically homogeneous binary system. Given the similar flux ratios and separations between HIP 55507 AB and systems with young substellar companions, our results open the door to systematically measuring13CO andH218Oabundances in the atmospheres of substellar or even planetary-mass companions with similar spectral types.

     
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  7. Schmidt, Dirk ; Schreiber, Laura ; Vernet, Elise (Ed.)
    The W. M. Keck Observatory Adaptive Optics (AO) facilities have been operating with a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) based real time controller (RTC) since 2007. The RTC inputs data from various AO wavefront and tip/tilt sensors; and corrects image blurring from atmospheric turbulence via deformable and tip/tilt mirrors. Since its commissioning, the Keck I and Keck II RTCs have been upgraded to support new hardware such as pyramid wavefront and infrared tip-tilt sensors. However, they are reaching the limits of their capabilities in terms of processing bandwidth and the ability to interface with new hardware. Together with the Keck All-sky Precision Adaptive optics (KAPA) project, a higher performance and a more reliable RTC is needed to support next generation capabilities such as laser tomography and sensor fusion. This paper provides an overview of the new RTC system, developed with our contractor/collaborators (Microgate, Swinburne University of Technology and Australian National University), and the initial on-sky performance. The upgrade includes an Interface Module to interface with the wavefront sensors and controlled hardware, and a Graphical Processing Unit (GPU) based computational engine to meet the system’s control requirements and to provide a flexible software architecture to allow future algorithms development and capabilities. The system saw first light in 2021 and is being commissioned in 2022 to support single conjugate laser guide star (LGS) AO, along with a more sensitive EMCCD camera. Initial results are provided to demonstrate single NGS & LGS performance, system reliability, and the planned upgrade for four LGS to support laser tomography. 
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  8. Schmidt, Dirk ; Schreiber, Laura ; Vernet, Elise (Ed.)
    Uncorrected residual wavefront errors limit the ultimate performance of adaptive optics (AO) systems. We present different contributing factors and techniques to estimate and compensate these wavefront errors in the Keck natural guide star (NGS) AO systems. The error terms include low order static and semi-static aberrations from multiple sources, periodic and random segment piston errors, single-segment low order aberrations, wavefront sensor aliasing, vibrations, calibration drifts, and AO-to-telescope offload related errors. We present the design of a new AO subsystem, a residual wavefront controller (rWFC) to monitor the performance of the AO control loops and the image quality of the AO science instruments and apply the necessary changes to the telescope and AO parameters to minimize the residual wavefront errors. The distributed system consists of components at the telescope, AO bench and the science instruments. A few components of this system are already tested as on-demand standalone tools and will be integrated into a high-level graphical user interface (GUI) to operate the system. The software tool will periodically collect AO telemetry data, perform control loop parameter optimization and update AO parameters such as loop gains, centroid gain, etc. In addition, the system will analyze the science data at the end of each exposure and estimate telescope/AO performance when a bright point source is available in the science field. The benefits of reducing or eliminating the residual wavefront errors have broad implications for optical astronomy. Testing these techniques on a segmented telescope will be extremely useful to the teams developing high contrast AO systems for all extremely large telescopes and future segmented space telescopes. 
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  9. Schmidt, Dirk ; Schreiber, Laura ; Vernet, Elise (Ed.)
    We present the status and plans for the Keck All sky Precision Adaptive optics (KAPA) program. KAPA includes (1) an upgrade to the Keck I laser guide star adaptive optics (AO) facility to improve image quality and sky coverage, (2) the inclusion of AO telemetry-based point spread function estimates with all science exposures, (3) four key science programs, and (4) an educational component focused on broadening the participation of women and underrepresented groups in instrumentation. For this conference we focus on the KAPA upgrades since the 2020 SPIE proceedings1 including implementation of a laser asterism generator, wavefront sensor, real-time controller, asterism and turbulence simulators, the laser tomography system itself along with new operations software and science tools, and modifications to an existing near-infrared tip-tilt sensor to support multiple natural guide star and focus measurements. We will also report on the results of daytime and on-sky calibrations and testing. 
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