The iLocater cryostat: design and thermal control strategy for precision radial velocity measurements
Jonathan Crass, Louis G. Fantano, Frederick R. Hearty, Justin R., Crepp, Matthew J. Nelson, Sheila M. Wall, David A. Cavalieri, Corina Koca,, David L. King, Robert O. Reynolds, Karl R. Stapelfeldt

TL;DR
The paper details the design and thermal control strategy of the iLocater cryostat, enabling ultra-stable, high-precision radial velocity measurements crucial for detecting Earth-like exoplanets.
Contribution
It introduces a novel cryostat design with active and passive thermal control, using Invar components and a compact spectrograph to achieve sub-mK stability for precision RV measurements.
Findings
Active radiation shield maintains sub-mK stability.
Invar-based optical board cooled to 58K reduces thermal expansion.
Design enables long-term sub-mK thermal stability.
Abstract
The current generation of precision radial velocity (RV) spectrographs are seeing-limited instruments. In order to achieve high spectral resolution on 8m class telescopes, these spectrographs require large optics and in turn, large instrument volumes. Achieving milli-Kelvin thermal stability for these systems is challenging but is vital in order to obtain a single measurement RV precision of better than 1m/s. This precision is crucial to study Earth-like exoplanets within the habitable zone. iLocater is a next generation RV instrument being developed for the Large Binocular Telescope. Unlike seeing-limited RV instruments, iLocater uses adaptive optics (AO) to inject a diffraction-limited beam into single-mode fibers. These fibers illuminate the instrument spectrograph, facilitating a diffraction-limited design and a small instrument volume compared to present-day instruments. This…
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