Abnormal slant in spectrum
Posted: Fri Jan 17, 2014 2:26 am
I first noticed this a few weeks ago and though it was due to the target star being close to the top of the slit gap and the spectrum sitting high in the CCD FOV.
These have been corrected but I still see the issue/ concern/ problem.
I'm using the Genesis 4" f5 Petzal, a 29micron slit, the Spectra_L200 with1200 l/mm grating. (Doesn't seem to matter which grating - the slant is seen with 300 l/mm) and the ATik314L (1 x 1 binning)
The imaging camera is well focused on the neon lamp lines, and the PHD guiding seems OK...
When the spectrum is slightly extended 10-15pixel high, you start to see an abnormal "slant" roughly 15 degrees (!!) this doesn't correspond to the ref lamp slant etc.
We found a reference to a similar problem:
http://wsdiscovery.free.fr/astronomie/s ... index.html
Obviously when the spectrum height is reduced, it's no longer obvious.....
I attach a typical ref lamp image and a recent V1369 Cen image to show the effect. Can anyone (Christian?) comment/ provide feedback/ additional info?
Any assistance would be welcomed!!
These have been corrected but I still see the issue/ concern/ problem.
I'm using the Genesis 4" f5 Petzal, a 29micron slit, the Spectra_L200 with1200 l/mm grating. (Doesn't seem to matter which grating - the slant is seen with 300 l/mm) and the ATik314L (1 x 1 binning)
The imaging camera is well focused on the neon lamp lines, and the PHD guiding seems OK...
When the spectrum is slightly extended 10-15pixel high, you start to see an abnormal "slant" roughly 15 degrees (!!) this doesn't correspond to the ref lamp slant etc.
We found a reference to a similar problem:
http://wsdiscovery.free.fr/astronomie/s ... index.html
Obviously when the spectrum height is reduced, it's no longer obvious.....
I attach a typical ref lamp image and a recent V1369 Cen image to show the effect. Can anyone (Christian?) comment/ provide feedback/ additional info?
Any assistance would be welcomed!!