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Prime Focus Spectrograph - Subaru's future -

Authors :
Sugai, Hajime
Karoji, Hiroshi
Takato, Naruhisa
Tamura, Naoyuki
Shimono, Atsushi
Ohyama, Youichi
Ueda, Akitoshi
Ling, Hung-Hsu
de Arruda, Marcio Vital
Barkhouser, Robert H.
Bennett, Charles L.
Bickerton, Steve
Braun, David F.
Bruno, Robin J.
Carr, Michael A.
Oliveira, João Batista de Carvalho
Chang, Yin-Chang
Chen, Hsin-Yo
Dekany, Richard G.
Dominici, Tania Pereira
Ellis, Richard S.
Fisher, Charles D.
Gunn, James E.
Heckman, Timothy M.
Ho, Paul T. P.
Hu, Yen-Shan
Jaquet, Marc
Karr, Jennifer
Kimura, Masahiko
Fèvre, Olivier Le
Mignant, David Le
Loomis, Craig
Lupton, Robert H.
Madec, Fabrice
Marrara, Lucas Souza
Martin, Laurent
Murayama, Hitoshi
de Oliveira, Antonio Cesar
de Oliveira, Claudia Mendes
de Oliveira, Ligia Souza
Orndorff, Joe D.
Vilaça, Rodrigo de Paiva
Macanhan, Vanessa Bawden de Paula
Prieto, Eric
Santos, Jesulino Bispo dos
Seiffert, Michael D.
Smee, Stephen A.
Smith, Roger M.
Sodré Jr, Laerte
Spergel, David N.
Surace, Christian
Vives, Sebastien
Wang, Shiang-Yu
Yan, Chi-Hung
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

The Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) of the Subaru Measurement of Images and Redshifts (SuMIRe) project has been endorsed by Japanese community as one of the main future instruments of the Subaru 8.2-meter telescope at Mauna Kea, Hawaii. This optical/near-infrared multi-fiber spectrograph targets cosmology with galaxy surveys, Galactic archaeology, and studies of galaxy/AGN evolution. Taking advantage of Subaru's wide field of view, which is further extended with the recently completed Wide Field Corrector, PFS will enable us to carry out multi-fiber spectroscopy of 2400 targets within 1.3 degree diameter. A microlens is attached at each fiber entrance for F-ratio transformation into a larger one so that difficulties of spectrograph design are eased. Fibers are accurately placed onto target positions by positioners, each of which consists of two stages of piezo-electric rotary motors, through iterations by using back-illuminated fiber position measurements with a wide-field metrology camera. Fibers then carry light to a set of four identical fast-Schmidt spectrographs with three color arms each: the wavelength ranges from 0.38 {\mu}m to 1.3 {\mu}m will be simultaneously observed with an average resolving power of 3000. Before and during the era of extremely large telescopes, PFS will provide the unique capability of obtaining spectra of 2400 cosmological/astrophysical targets simultaneously with an 8-10 meter class telescope. The PFS collaboration, led by IPMU, consists of USP/LNA in Brazil, Caltech/JPL, Princeton, & JHU in USA, LAM in France, ASIAA in Taiwan, and NAOJ/Subaru.<br />Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, submitted to "Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy IV, Ian S. McLean, Suzanne K. Ramsay, Hideki Takami, Editors, Proc. SPIE 8446 (2012)"

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1210.2719
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.926954