MagAO-X 2022A Day 17: Coronagraphic Burrito

It finally feels like we’re starting to settle in here. We have begun doing hours-long observations of science targets for observers, and that means we can actually take a breath, catch up on email, and bond with our friends at LCO.

While having our dinner we were graced by our friend the Burro who likes pets.

Hi there, I could use a pet.

Sebastiaan had to negotiate passage to dinner.

There is a price for passage.

And Logan got her first nose scritches in.

Calm.

Sebastiaan then had to pay the toll to get by.

Sebastiaan tests the ear-face boundary condition

And Avalon made friends too.

This was Avalon’s last night at LCO (for this run, anyway). Safe travels and thanks for all the help!

Our telescope operator Hernán Nuñez ( a hero of MagAO runs past ) told us that he thinks these guys have basically been abandon up here for a couple of years. This one, at least, clearly trusts and even likes humans, so it doesn’t seem like they’ve been wild their whole lives. Our friend might be a little lonely.

After our fun dinner party with the Burro, I walked up to the telescope for the first time since we went on sky. On the way up I saw our friend Povilas — It’s great catching up with old friends after such a long absence.

The road to the Clay. That’s Povilas coming down the hill.

The night started with some VIS-X work by Sebastiaan.

Where’s Sebastiaan? He’s in this photo working on MagAO-X.

Logan gave a tour to some friends.

We started work on a nice bright star, part of Logan’s program. This was a great chance to put our high-speed low-drag coronagraphic mode to work. In the below image you can see the usual MagAO-X control panels. The lower right desktop shows the simultaneous images with a coronagraph disk occulting the star so we can look for companions. The 4 spots forming a cross are made by our deformable mirror as fiducials for alignment and photometry. The right-most image is our “low order wavefront sensor” camera, which is imaging light reflected from the coronagraph mask (the thing making the dark spot in the center of the other two images). We use that light to keep the spot centered at high speed (in this case 600 Hz). Fully understanding and optimizing this mode of observing is the key to my main science goal for MagAO-X, so it’s really exciting to see us getting started on it with a real star.

need more monitors

Here’s a close up view. Here the “satellite speckles” have green lines drawn between them, and the coronagraph is centered on the cross.

Exercise for the student: where does each speckle in this image come from?

While we worked inside on our tiny little field of view, the great big outside sky was putting on quite a show:

The moon over Clay as we tracked one of Laird’s targets
5 planets in one view

In the desert. A horse with no name. I can still remember my name. But the day of the week is already gone.

MagAO-X 2022A Day 9: New Arrivals and New Friends

This picture is to show you that some work happened today:

Dr. Sebastiaan Haffert, NASA Sagan Fellow, hard at work flattening MagAO-X. Flat means “optically as perfect as our system is capable of”. The problem is that in this research group “we have standards”, and they are hard to meet. So we do this over and over and over again in search of perfection.
Here’s the result. Looking AMAZING.

The following images are just filler:

Action Vizzy!
Fox antics at dinner — they know when the food is out.

The big MagAO-X news is that Logan and Avalon arrived today! All three of our teams have successfully made it to LCO with no problems at SCL. If you squint down in the valley you can see the dust trail of their van, which we noticed while eating dinner outside.

Click to enbiggen, and look for the dust plume to the left of the leftward pole, down in the valley.

Now for the big news of the day. I have a new friend!!!!!!! On my way for a run, I strolled out of room just as one of the burros came through two of the dorms and started down the path ahead of me.

Once I started to catch up, he turned around. I think maybe he realized I was between him and his family, but he also didn’t mind much. In fact, he put his head down, relaxed his ears, and took a couple of steps towards me: which the farm kid in me recognized as classic horse for “hi, it’s ok to pet me”. I did not misinterpret:

Apologies for the vertical video. It’s hard to hold a phone and pet a burro at the same time.

Though the body language is the same, unlike the horses I know, burros do not appear to like their ears scritched. But face, nose, and chin are fine.

I then heard a clip clop behind me and realized it wasn’t just us:

You’ll recognize our friend the lovely Backup Burrito. She realized it was me and kept on trucking lest I put her back to work.

About 20 minutes later I passed them when I was running back up the hill from the bodega. The adults just looked at me briefly and kept going. But Backup Burrito stopped and acted like she was trying to work up the courage to smell my hand. But not yet.

MagAO-X 2022A Day 6: on the Sunset Antics of Astronomers and Vizcachas

My day started with a classic LCO breakfast.

A perfect way to start the day.

After that we ran up the hill and cabled our 2040 actuator MEMS DM. We got it on the first try! We are getting better at this procedure.

Sebastiaan and I cabling the tweeter. Photo by Joseph Long.
Sebastiaan is testing the actuator response to see if we got any cable wrong. We didn’t.

After that, we turned the cleanroom over to our Bubbled comrades. Laird and Justin put in a loooong day of aligning the optics. We sat up in the library and watched. It’s sort of like a medical procedure drama.

Laird and Justin working on MagAO-X.
At the end of the day we had a pretty nice PSF. Not perfect, but that’s why we have an AO system. Tomorrow we’ll clean this up with the DMs. That’s Laird at upper right.

We found this book in the library, which we might need if any REAL problems come up.

We don’t use FORTRAN
A panoramic view of LCO just before the sun dips below the horizon, with Dr. Justin Knight a bubble’s length away from the photographer.

After taking the above photo and circling around Justin, I started down the path to begin my walk up. Then I noticed a sliver of moon hanging over the valley. Then the following ensued:

Joseph got an up close and personal Vizcacha interaction.

It can take a second, but you’ll notice that Vizzy is looking into the library at Joseph.

The reference to bananas in the slack convo is to this blog post from the MagAO-Classic Age of Legends. We have a long history of shenanigans with the cleanroom vizcacha family.

The post-sunset show was extravagant tonight.

LCO, the Moon, and a plane.

Changing up the sound tonight for the song of the day. I think this is the best of the “new” Metallica, as good as the old classics.

Metallica: Moth Into Flame

MagAO-X 2022A Day 4: The Backup Burrito

We hit a pretty major roadblock today. Due to the sky high fuel prices around the globe, Las Campanas Observatory has had to drastically reduce use of most forms of energy, including electricity for cranes, propane for forklifts, and gas for trucks, except as needed for nighttime operations. So we essentially have no power when the sun is up.

Our assigned backup burrito for the day. She was game, and did all the heavy lifting we usually have a forklift and crane do. Thanks friend.

Luckily, as we always do on the MagAO-X and LCO teams, we had a contingency plan. This is, of course, the burros who hang around the mountain top. The young lady above was our assigned crane and forklift motor for the day. It took a little longer than normal, but in the end we managed to get MagAO-X unpacked.

Sebastiaan inspecting the inside of MagAO-X. Looks like nothing is broken.
Our only small problem was a broken dessicant bag, which dribbled a bit. Here Joseph is holding a side panel up while Sebastiaan vacuums.

Yesterday Sebastiaan mentioned our misbehaving graphics cards (GPUs). When we turned the electronics on, 0/4 GPUs that we use for our super-fast real-time computations were alive. There is not much in common between these 4 devices in terms of where/how they are installed, so it seemed extremely unlikely that they all just quit on us. So after none of us getting much sleep, in part due to racing minds trying to figure out what it could be, we divided our duties today so Joseph could troubleshoot while Sebastiaan and I worked with the crew on unpacking.

In the end it was two different problems. One of them just needed a stern talking to (nerd code for we took it out and put it back in, and it worked). The other 3 were more complicated. We use a PCIe expansion system, which lets us attach more crap to our computers. The backplane of that failed, but luckily we had a backup burrito for this too, and once it was put into service we now have all 4 GPUs working.

Our control system electronics, with the comforting glow of a 2080 Ti FTW card visible.

When we went up to the top we saw a vulture soaring on thermals. It was coming right over us, and we could hear a whistling sound from its feathers.

We have some good close ups, but I like this background.

The best news of the day was our friend Vizzy the cleanroom vizcacha making an appearance. This was when I knew the GPUs would be ok.

Vizzy!

The song of the day accurately reflects my sentiments after what was a damn stressful 24 hours.

MagAO-X 2022A Day 2: Way To Go Past Us

When we last left LCO we expected to be back in just 3.5 months. We’re nerds of the science and engineering type, so we tend to take lots of notes and pictures because we think we want to remember this or that. But there are always those things where you don’t even think about not remembering it because it’s so obvious, or around here it’s because we have done it that way every 6 months for the last 10 years.

Well, guess what. 2+ years of being totally distracted by global catastrophe fries your brain and you forget a lot of things. So I spent a lot of time today rummaging around all of our junk at LCO trying to piece my brain back together. Several times I came across a nicely labeled box, or a place where someone collected all the bolts that go with the thingy, and said out loud “way to go past us!”.

But also there are cases where there’s nothing on the hard drive and I just stand there like this:

You can briefly see Sebastiaan and Joseph sitting next to the fires of AOC there at the end wondering why I’m mumbling to myself

The big accomplishment of the day was unpacking our AO Operators Computer (a.k.a. AOC, a.k.a. exao1) and getting it set up. Joseph and Sebastiaan assembled Megadesk (without breaking it) and got AOC plugged in, on the network, and monitors sorted out.

Somehow, even after all of this time, you always see something that you haven’t before.

We also had our first Earthquake of the run. I was up in the cleanroom after dinner, and announced it on Slack. Sebastiaan was down in the lodge and saw my slack message before he felt it.

Just a long slow rumble that made the roof rattle, nothing moved though.

We also unveiled the new attire for cool-kids at LCO

MagAO-X rests in the background, waiting for crane day.
These are the handiwork of MagAO-X’s own lithography expert Avalon McLeod. I’m 100% sure she’ll write a post about how she does it once she gets down here. (hint hint)

There are some Burros around, as you’ve seen in previous posts. Today I’d like to highlight the Burritos. There is one hanging around with Ma up here at the lodge, and another down at the Bodega.

Lodge Burrito (right)
Bodega Burrito (Left)
Hungry Lodge Burrito

And of course, there are the sunsets. Oh how I have missed the LCO sunset ritual.

So good to be back.
In 10 days we won’t get to see this, cuz we’ll be working already.

Us first 3 have just 1 more day of “bubble”. Assuming negative tests tomorrow evening we’ll get to join normal life at LCO. So far, we’ve just been able to say “hi!!!” to our friends from a distance. We’re really looking forward to actually getting to reconnect.

The song of day’s video sorta captures what it feels like to look back through a decade’s worth of blog posts to find that thing that you forgot.

Watch for Lynx!