4.4 Article

Correcting Systematic Polarization Effects in Keck LRISp Spectropolarimetry to <0.05%

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Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/682323

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Funding

  1. Leibniz Association, Germany [SAW-2011-KIS-7]
  2. European Research Council [ERC-2011-AdG 291659]
  3. Air Force Research Labs (AFRL)

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Spectropolarimetric measurements at moderate spectral resolutions are effective tracers of stellar magnetic fields and circumstellar environments when signal-to-noise ratios (S/Ns) above 2000 can be achieved. The LRISp spectropolarimeter is capable of achieving these S/Ns on faint targets with the 10 m aperture of the Keck telescope, provided several instrumental artifacts can be suppressed. We describe here several methods to overcome instrumental error sources that are required to achieve these high S/Ns on LRISp. We explore high S/N techniques such as defocusing and slit-stepping during integration with high spectral and spatial oversampling. We find that the instrument flexure and interference fringes introduced by the achromatic retarders create artificial signals at 0.5% levels in the red channel which mimic real stellar signals and limit the sensitivity and calibration stability of LRISp. Careful spectral extraction and data filtering algorithms can remove these error sources. For faint targets and long exposures, cosmic ray hits are frequent and present a major limitation to the upgraded deep depletion red-channel CCD. These must be corrected to the same high S/N levels, requiring careful spectral extraction using iterative filtering algorithms. We demonstrate here characterization of these sources of instrumental polarization artifacts and present several methods used to successfully overcome these limitations. We have measured the linear to circular cross-talk and find it to be roughly 5%, consistent with the known instrument limitations. We show spectropolarimetric signals on brown dwarfs are clearly detectable at 0.2% amplitudes with sensitivities better than 0.05% at full spectral sampling in atomic and molecular bands. Future LRISp users can perform high-sensitivity observations with high-quality calibration when following the described algorithms.

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