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The University of Tokyo Atacama Observatory 6.5m telescope : On-sky performance of the near-infrared instrument SWIMS on the Subaru telescope

Authors :
Tomoko L. Suzuki
Jun Toshikawa
Ichi Tanaka
Yuzuru Yoshii
Takao Soyano
Kentaro Asano
Takafumi Kamizuka
Takeo Minezaki
Mamoru Doi
Yukihiro Kono
Tsubasa Michifuji
Masahiro Konishi
Toshihiko Tanabe
Kotaro Kohno
Tadayuki Kodama
Yasunori Terao
Ken Tateuchi
Shigeyuki Sako
Tetsuro Asano
Tsutomu Aoki
Hiroki Nakamura
Tomoki Morokuma
S. Koshida
Kousuke Kushibiki
Kengo Tachibana
Mizuki Numata
Masao Hayashi
Soya Todo
Ryou Ohsawa
Ken-ichi Tadaki
Kentaro Motohara
Yutaro Kitagawa
Bunyo Hatsukade
Yutaka Kobayakawa
Natsuko Kato
Masuo Tanaka
Hidenori Takahashi
Yusei Koyama
Nuo Chen
Takashi Miyata
Rhythm Shimakawa
Hirofumi Okita
Hiroaki Sameshima
Hirofumi Ohashi
Ken'ichi Tarusawa
Source :
Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VIII.
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
SPIE, 2020.

Abstract

The Simultaneous-color Wide-field Infrared Multi-object Spectrograph (SWIMS) is one of the 1st generation facility instruments for the University of Tokyo Atacama Observatory (TAO) 6.5 m telescope currently being constructed at the summit of Cerro Chajnantor (5,640 m altitude) in northern Chile. SWIMS has two optical arms, the blue arm covering 0.9–1.4 µm and the red 1.4–2.5 µm, by inserting a dichroic mirror into the collimated beam, and thus is capable of taking images in two filter-bands simultaneously in imaging mode, or whole nearinfrared (0.9–2.5 µm) low-to-medium resolution multi-object spectra in spectroscopy (MOS) mode, both with a single exposure. SWIMS was carried into Subaru Telescope in 2017 for performance evaluation prior to completion of the construction of the 6.5 m telescope, and successfully saw the imaging first light in May 2018 and MOS first light in Jan 2019. After three engineering runs including the first light observations, SWIMS has been accepted as a new PI instrument for Subaru Telescope from the semester S21A until S22B. In this paper, we report on details of on-sky performance of the instrument evaluated during the engineering observations for a total of 7.5 nights.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VIII
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........fb7de416d15d17baf83ee1ebe836b05b