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MUSE: a second-generation integral-field spectrograph for the VLT

Authors :
Thierry Contini
C. M. Carollo
Florence Laurent
Antonio Manescau
Martin M. Roth
E. Popow
Andreas Kelz
L. Capoani
P. Caillier
Christian Monstein
Lutz Wisotzki
N. Champavert
C. Koehler
Stefan Dreizler
P. Boehm
Roland Bacon
Peter M. Weilbacher
Simon J. Lilly
Cyril Petit
P. T. de Zeeuw
Aurélien Jarno
Joop Schaye
Julien Devriendt
D. Hofmann
Stefan Stroebele
Jean-Pierre Dubois
Magali Loupias
Luca Pasquini
G. Soucail
Roland Reiss
R. Pello
Eric Emsellem
J. Gerssen
Herve Wozniak
G. Gallou
Matthias Steinmetz
L. Parès
Svend M. Bauer
S. Brau-Nogué
Harald Nicklas
Richard M. McDermid
Bernard Delabre
Didier Boudon
Emmanuel Pecontal
Eric Daguisé
M. Dupieux
Johan Kosmalski
Andreas Quirrenbach
Edgard Renault
J. P. Dupin
Wolfram Kollatschny
Marijn Franx
B. Guiderdoni
J.-P. Picat
T. Hahn
Arlette Pécontal-Rousset
J.-L. Lizon
Remko Stuik
Pierre Ferruit
Source :
ESO Astrophysics Symposia European Southern Observatory ISBN: 9783540769620
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
SPIE, 2003.

Abstract

The Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) is a second-generation instrument in development for the Very Large Telescope (VLT) of the European Southern Observatory (ESO), due to begin operation in 2011/12. MUSE will be an extremely powerful integral-field spectrograph fed by a new multiple-laser adaptive optics system on the VLT. In its usual operating mode, MUSE will, in a single observation, produce a 3-dimensional data cube consisting of 90,000 R 3000 spectra, each covering a full spectral octave (480-930 nm), and fully sampling a contiguous 1×1 arcmin2 field with 0.2×0.2 arcsec2 apertures. A high-resolution mode will increase the spatial sampling to 0.025 arcsec per pixel. MUSE is built around a novel arrangement of 24 identical spectrographs (each comparable to a 1st generation VLT instrument), which are fed by a set of 24 precision image slicers. MUSE is designed for stability, with only 2 modes, and virtually no moving parts, allowing very long exposures to be accumulated. Together with high throughput, this ensures that MUSE will have extreme sensitivity for observing faint objects. We overview the technical and scientific aspects of MUSE, highlighting the key challenges for dealing with the unprecedented quantity and complexity of the data, and the integration with the VLT adaptive optics facility (AOF) - a key development on the path to extremely large telescopes (ELTs). © 2008 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

Details

ISBN :
978-3-540-76962-0
ISSN :
0277786X
ISBNs :
9783540769620
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....57319dd511e40d45bede0438be6e3bcd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.462334