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Final Design and On-Sky Testing of the iLocater SX Acquisition Camera: Broadband Single-Mode Fiber Coupling

Authors :
Crass, Jonathan
Bechter, Andrew
Sands, Brian
King, David L.
Ketterer, Ryan
Engstrom, Matthew
Hamper, Randall
Kopon, Derek
Smous, James
Crepp, Justin R.
Montoya, Manny
Durney, Oli
Cavalieri, David
Reynolds, Robert
Vansickle, Michael
Onuma, Eleanya
Thomes, Joseph
Mullin, Scott
Shelton, Chris
Wallace, Kent
Bechter, Eric
Vaz, Amali
Power, Jennifer
Rahmer, Gustavo
Ertel, Steve
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Enabling efficient injection of light into single-mode fibers (SMFs) is a key requirement in realizing diffraction-limited astronomical spectroscopy on ground-based telescopes. SMF-fed spectrographs, facilitated by the use of adaptive optics (AO), offer distinct advantages over comparable seeing-limited designs, including higher spectral resolution within a compact and stable instrument volume, and a telescope independent spectrograph design. iLocater is an extremely precise radial velocity (EPRV) spectrograph being built for the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). We have designed and built the front-end fiber injection system, or acquisition camera, for the SX (left) primary mirror of the LBT. The instrument was installed in 2019 and underwent on-sky commissioning and performance assessment. In this paper, we present the instrument requirements, acquisition camera design, as well as results from first-light measurements. Broadband single-mode fiber coupling in excess of 35% (absolute) in the near-infrared (0.97-1.31{\mu}m) was achieved across a range of target magnitudes, spectral types, and observing conditions. Successful demonstration of on-sky performance represents both a major milestone in the development of iLocater and in making efficient ground-based SMF-fed astronomical instruments a reality.<br />Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2010.13795
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa3355