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First Light Results from the Hermes Spectrograph at the AAT

Authors :
Sheinis, Andrew
Anguiano, Borja
Asplund, Martin
Bacigalupo, Carlos
Barden, Sam
Birchall, Michael
Bland-Hawthorn, Joss
Brzeski, Jurek
Cannon, Russell
Carollo, Daniela
Case, Scott
Casey, Andrew
Churilov, Vladimir
Warrick, Couch
Dean, Robert
De Silva, Gayandhi
D'Orazi, Valentina
Duong, Ly
Farrell, Tony
Fiegert, Kristin
Freeman, Kenneth
Gabriella, Frost
Gers, Luke
Goodwin, Michael
Gray, Doug
Green, Andrew
Heald, Ron
Heijmans, Jeroen
Ireland, Michael
Jones, Damien
Kafle, Prajwal
Keller, Stefan
Klauser, Urs
Kondrat, Yuriy
Kos, Janez
Lawrence, Jon
Lee, Steve
Mali, Slavko
Martell, Sarah
Mathews, Darren
Mayfield, Don
Miziarski, Stan
Muller, Rolf
Pai, Naveen
Patterson, Robert
Penny, Ed
Orr, David
Schlesinger, Katharine
Sharma, Sanjib
Shortridge, Keith
Simpson, Jeffrey
Smedley, Scott
Smith, Greg
Stafford, Darren
Staszak, Nicholas
Vuong, Minh
Waller, Lewis
de Boer, Elizabeth Wylie
Xavier, Pascal
Zheng, Jessica
Zhelem, Ross
Zucker, Daniel
Zwitter, Tomaz
Source :
J. Astron. Telesc. Instrum. Syst. 1(3), 035002 (Aug 10, 2015)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The High Efficiency and Resolution Multi Element Spectrograph, HERMES, is a facility-class optical spectrograph for the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT). It is designed primarily for Galactic Archaeology, the first major attempt to create a detailed understanding of galaxy formation and evolution by studying the history of our own galaxy, the Milky Way. The goal of the GALAH survey is to reconstruct the mass assembly history of the Milky Way through a detailed chemical abundance study of one million stars. The spectrograph is based at the AAT and is fed by the existing 2dF robotic fiber positioning system. The spectrograph uses volume phase holographic gratings to achieve a spectral resolving power of 28,000 in standard mode and also provides a high-resolution mode ranging between 40,000 and 50,000 using a slit mask. The GALAH survey requires an SNR greater than 100 for a star brightness of V ?= 14 in an exposure time of one hour. The total spectral coverage of the four channels is about 100 nm between 370 and 1000 nm for up to 392 simultaneous targets within the 2-degree field of view. HERMES has been commissioned over three runs, during bright time in October, November, and December 2013, in parallel with the beginning of the GALAH pilot survey, which started in November 2013. We present the first-light results from the commissioning run and the beginning of the GALAH survey, including performance results such as throughput and resolution, as well as instrument reliability.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 28 figures. AAT, 2dF, HERMES

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
J. Astron. Telesc. Instrum. Syst. 1(3), 035002 (Aug 10, 2015)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1509.00129
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2234334