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Abstract Extreme precision radial velocity (EPRV) measurements contend with internal noise (instrumental systematics) and external noise (intrinsic stellar variability) on the road to 10 cm s−1“exo-Earth” sensitivity. Both of these noise sources are well-probed using “Sun-as-a-star” RVs and cross-instrument comparisons. We built the Solar Calibrator (SoCal), an autonomous system that feeds stable, disk-integrated sunlight to the recently commissioned Keck Planet Finder (KPF) at the W. M. Keck Observatory. With SoCal, KPF acquires signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) ∼ 1200,R= 98,000 optical (445–870 nm) spectra of the Sun in 5 s exposures at unprecedented cadence for an EPRV facility using KPF’s fast readout mode (<16 s between exposures). Daily autonomous operation is achieved by defining an operations loop using state machine logic. Data affected by clouds are automatically flagged using a reliable quality control metric derived from simultaneous irradiance measurements. Comparing solar data across the growing global network of EPRV spectrographs with solar feeds will allow EPRV teams to disentangle internal and external noise sources and benchmark spectrograph performance. To facilitate this, all SoCal data products are immediately available to the public on the Keck Observatory Archive. We compared SoCal RVs to contemporaneous RVs from NEID, the only other immediately public EPRV solar data set. We find agreement at the 30–40 cm s−1level on timescales of several hours, which is comparable to the combined photon-limited precision. Data from SoCal were also used to assess a detector problem and wavelength calibration inaccuracies associated with KPF during early operations. Long-term SoCal operations will collect upwards of 1000 solar spectra per six-hour day using KPF’s fast readout mode, enabling stellar activity studies at high S/N on our nearest solar-type star.more » « less
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Abstract Since the start of science operations in 1993, the twin 10‐m W. M. Keck Observatory (WMKO) telescopes have continued to maximize their scientific impact and to produce transformative discoveries that keep the observing community on the frontiers of astronomical research. Upgraded capabilities and new instrumentation are provided through collaborative partnerships with Caltech, the University of California, and the University of Hawaii instrument development teams along with industry and other organizations. The observatory adapts and responds to the observers' evolving needs as defined in the observatory's strategic plan periodically refreshed in collaboration with the science community. This paper is an overview of the instrumentation projects that range from commissioning to early conceptual stages. An emphasis is placed on the detector, detector controllers, and capability needs that are driven by the desired future technology defined in the 2022 strategic plan.more » « less
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Vernet, Joël R; Bryant, Julia J; Motohara, Kentaro (Ed.)The Keck Planet Finder (KPF) is a fiber-fed, high-resolution, echelle spectrometer that specializes in the discovery and characterization of exoplanets using Doppler spectroscopy. In designing KPF, the guiding principles were high throughput to promote survey speed and access to faint targets, and high stability to keep uncalibrated systematic Doppler measurement errors below 30 cm s−1. KPF achieves optical illumination stability with a tip-tilt injection system, octagonal cross-section optical fibers, a double scrambler, and active fiber agitation. The optical bench and optics with integral mounts are made of Zerodur to provide thermo-mechanical stability. The spectrometer includes a slicer to reformat the optical input, green and red channels (445-600 nm and 600-870 nm), and achieves a resolving power of ∼97,000. Additional subsystems include a separate, medium-resolution UV spectrometer (383-402 nm) to record the Ca II H & K lines, an exposure meter for real-time flux monitoring, a solar feed for sunlight injection, and a calibration system with a laser frequency comb and etalon for wavelength calibration. KPF was installed and commissioned at the W. M. Keck Observatory in late 2022 and early 2023 and is now in regular use for scientific observations. This paper presents an overview of the as-built KPF instrument and its subsystems, design considerations, and initial on-sky performance.more » « less
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Evans, Christopher J.; Bryant, Julia J.; Motohara, Kentaro (Ed.)Since the start of science operations in 1993, the twin 10-meter W. M. Keck Observatory (WMKO) telescopes have continued to maximize their scientific impact and to produce transformative discoveries that keep the observing community on the frontiers of astronomical research. Upgraded capabilities and new instrumentation are provided though collaborative partnerships with Caltech, the University of California, and the University of Hawaii instrument development teams, as well as industry and other organizations. This paper summarizes the performance of recently commissioned infrastructure projects, technology upgrades, and new additions to the suite of observatory instrumentation. We also provide a status of projects currently in design or development phases and, since we keep our eye on the future, summarize projects in exploratory phases that originate from our 2022 strategic plan developed in collaboration with our science community to adapt and respond to evolving science needs.more » « less
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Evans, Christopher J.; Bryant, Julia J.; Motohara, Kentaro (Ed.)As part of the Keck Planet Finder (KPF) project, a Fiber Injection Unit (FIU) was implemented and will be deployed on the Keck Ⅰ telescope, with the aim of providing dispersion compensated and tip/tilt corrected light to the KPF instrument and accompanying H&K spectrometer. The goal of KPF is to characterize exoplanets via the radial velocity technique, with a single measurement precision of 30cm/s or better. To accomplish this, the FIU must provide a stable F-number and chief ray angle to the Science and Calcium H&K fibers. Our design approach was use a planar optical layout with atmospheric dispersion compensation for both the Science and Calcium H&K arms. A SWIR guider camera and piezo tip/tilt mirror are used to keep the target centered on the fibers.more » « less
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Abstract The discovery and characterization of extrasolar planets using radial velocity (RV) measurements is limited by noise sources from the surfaces of host stars. Current techniques to suppress stellar magnetic activity rely on decorrelation using an activity indicator (e.g., strength of the Ca ii lines, width of the cross-correlation function, broadband photometry) or measurement of the RVs using only a subset of spectral lines that have been shown to be insensitive to activity. Here, we combine the above techniques by constructing a high-signal-to-noise activity indicator, the depth metric ( t ) , from the most activity-sensitive spectral lines using the “line-by-line” method of Dumusque (2018). Analogous to photometric decorrelation of RVs or Gaussian progress regression modeling of activity indices, time series modeling of ( t ) reduces the amplitude of magnetic activity in RV measurements; in an α CenB RV time series from HARPS, the RV rms was reduced from 2.67 to 1.02 m s −1 . ( t ) modeling enabled us to characterize injected planetary signals as small as 1 m s −1 . In terms of noise reduction and injected signal recovery, ( t ) modeling outperforms activity mitigation via the selection of activity-insensitive spectral lines. For Sun-like stars with activity signals on the m s −1 level, the depth metric independently tracks rotationally modulated and multiyear stellar activity with a level of quality similar to that of the FWHM of the CCF and log R HK ′ . The depth metric and its elaborations will be a powerful tool in the mitigation of stellar magnetic activity, particularly as a means of connecting stellar activity to physical processes within host stars.more » « less
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Evans, Christopher J.; Bryant, Julia J.; Motohara, Kentaro (Ed.)We present a compact, double-pass cross-dispersed echelle spectrograph that is tailored specifically to cover the 383 nm to 403 nm spectral range and record R∼16,000 spectra of the stellar chromospheric Ca II H and K lines. This `H and K' spectrometer was developed as a subsystem of the Keck Planet Finder (KPF), which is an extremely precise optical (440 - 870 nm) radial velocity spectrograph for Keck I, scheduled for commissioning Fall 2022, with the science objective of measuring precise masses of exoplanets. The H and K spectrometer will observe simultaneously with KPF to independently track the chromospheric activity of the host stars that KPF observes, which is expected to dominate the KPF measurement floor over long timescales. The H and K Spectrometer is fiber fed from the KPF fiber injection unit with total throughput of 4-7% (top of telescope to CCD) over its operating spectral range. Here we detail the optical design trade offs, mechanical design, and first results from alignment and integration testing.more » « less
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Evans, Christopher J.; Bryant, Julia J.; Motohara, Kentaro (Ed.)The Keck Planet Finder (KPF) is a fiber-fed, high-resolution, high-stability spectrometer in development at the UC Berkeley Space Sciences Laboratory for the W.M. Keck Observatory. KPF is designed to characterize exoplanets via Doppler spectroscopy with a goal of a single measurement precision of 0.3 m s-1 or better, however its resolution and stability will enable a wide variety of astrophysical pursuits. Here we provide post-preliminary design review design updates for several subsystems, including: the main spectrometer, the fabrication of the Zerodur optical bench; the data reduction pipeline; fiber agitator; fiber cable design; fiber scrambler; VPH testing results and the exposure meter.more » « less
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