A New Era in Solar Thermal-IR Astronomy: the NSO Array Camera (NAC) on the McMath-Pierce Telescope

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The U.S. National Solar Observatory Array Camera (NAC) is a cryogenically cooled 1Kx1K InSb ``Aladdin" array that recently became operational at the McMath-Pierce facility on Kitt Peak, a high dry site in the southwest U.S. (Arizona). The new camera is similar to those already incorporated into instruments on nighttime telescopes, and has unprecedented sensitivity, low noise, and excellent cosmetics compared with the Amber Engineering (AE) device it replaces. (The latter was scavenged from a commercial surveillance camera in the 1990's: only 256X256 format, high noise, and annoying flatfield structure). The NAC focal plane is maintained at 30 K by a mechanical closed-cycle helium cooler, dispensing with the cumbersome pumped--solid-N2 40 K system used previously with the AE camera. The NAC linearity has been verified for exposures as short as 1 ms, although latency in the data recording holds the maximum frame rate to about 8 Hz (in "streaming mode"). The camera is run in tandem with the Infrared Adaptive Optics (IRAO) system. Utilizing a 37-actuator deformable mirror, IRAO can--under moderate seeing conditions--correct the telescope image to the diffraction limit longward of 2.3 mu (if a suitable high contrast target is available: the IR granulation has proven too bland to reliably track). IRAO also provides fine control over the solar image for spatial scanning in long-slit mode with the 14 m vertical "Main" spectrograph (MS). A 1'X1' area scan, with 0.5" steps orthogonal to the slit direction, requires less than half a minute, much shorter than p-mode and granulation evolution time scales. A recent engineering test run, in April 2008, utilized NAC/IRAO/MS to capture the fundamental (4.6 mu) and first-overtone (2.3 mu) rovibrational bands of CO, including maps of quiet regions, drift scans along the equatorial limbs (to measure the off-limb molecular emissions), and imaging of a fortuitous small sunspot pair, a final gasp, perhaps, of Cycle 23. Future work with the NAC will emphasize pathfinding toward the next generation of IR imaging spectrometers for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope, whose 4 m aperture finally will bring sorely needed high spatial resolution to daytime infrared astronomy. In the meantime, the NAC is available to qualified solar physicists from around the world to conduct forefront research in the 1-5 mu region, on the venerable--but infrared friendly--McMath-Pierce telescope.

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