Physical Review X (Jun 2017)

Detection and Implications of Laser-Induced Raman Scattering at Astronomical Observatories

  • Frédéric P. A. Vogt,
  • Domenico Bonaccini Calia,
  • Wolfgang Hackenberg,
  • Cyrielle Opitom,
  • Mauro Comin,
  • Linda Schmidtobreik,
  • Jonathan Smoker,
  • Israel Blanchard,
  • Marcela Espinoza Contreras,
  • Ivan Aranda,
  • Julien Milli,
  • Yara L. Jaffe,
  • Fernando Selman,
  • Johann Kolb,
  • Pascale Hibon,
  • Harald Kuntschner,
  • Pierre-Yves Madec

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.7.021044
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
p. 021044

Abstract

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Laser guide stars employed at astronomical observatories provide artificial wavefront reference sources to help correct (in part) the impact of atmospheric turbulence on astrophysical observations. Following the recent commissioning of the 4 Laser Guide Star Facility (4LGSF) on Unit Telescope 4 (UT4) of the Very Large Telescope (VLT), we characterize the spectral signature of the uplink beams from the 22-W lasers to assess the impact of laser scattering from the 4LGSF on science observations. We use the Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) optical integral field spectrograph mounted on the Nasmyth B focus of UT4 to acquire spectra at a resolution of R≅3000 of the uplink laser beams over the wavelength range of 4750 Å–9350 Å. We report the first detection of laser-induced Raman scattering by N_{2}, O_{2}, CO_{2}, H_{2}O, and (tentatively) CH_{4} molecules in the atmosphere above the astronomical observatory of Cerro Paranal. In particular, our observations reveal the characteristic spectral signature of laser photons—but 480 Å to 2210 Å redder than the original laser wavelength of 5889.959 Å—landing on the 8.2-m primary mirror of UT4 after being Raman-scattered on their way up to the sodium layer. Laser-induced Raman scattering, a phenomenon not usually discussed in the astronomical context, is not unique to the observatory of Cerro Paranal, but it is common to any astronomical telescope employing a laser guide star (LGS) system. It is thus essential for any optical spectrograph coupled to a LGS system to thoroughly handle the possibility of a Raman spectral contamination via a proper baffling of the instrument and suitable calibrations procedures. These considerations are particularly applicable for the HARMONI optical spectrograph on the upcoming Extremely Large Telescope (ELT). At sites hosting multiple telescopes, laser-collision-prediction tools should also account for the presence of Raman emission from the uplink laser beam(s) to avoid the unintentional contamination of observations acquired with telescopes in the vicinity of a LGS system.