Abstract

ABSTRACT Observations with ground-based telescopes are affected by differential atmospheric dispersion due to the wavelength-dependent index of refraction of the atmosphere. The usage of an atmospheric dispersion corrector (ADC) is fundamental to compensate this effect. Atmospheric dispersion correction residuals above the level of ∼100 milliarcseconds (mas) will affect astronomical observations, in particular radial velocity and flux losses. The design of an ADC is based on atmospheric models. To the best of our knowledge, those models have never been tested on-sky. In this paper, we present a new method to measure the atmospheric dispersion on-sky in the optical range. We require an accuracy better than 50 mas that is equal to the difference between atmospheric models. The method is based on the use of cross-dispersion spectrographs to determine the position of the centroid of the spatial profile at each wavelength of each spectral order. The method is validated using cross-dispersed spectroscopic data acquired with the slit spectrograph UVES. We measure an instrumental dispersion of $\rm 47 ~ mas$ in the blue arm, and 15 and 23 mas in the two ranges of the red arm. We also measure a 4 per cent deviation in the pixel scale from the value cited in UVES manual. The accuracy of the method is ∼17 mas in the range of 315–665 nm. At this level, we can compare and characterize different atmospheric dispersion models for better future ADC designs.

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