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The AAO's Gemini High-Resolution Optical SpecTrograph (GHOST) concept
Author(s) -
Michael Ireland,
Stuart Barnes,
David Cochrane,
Matthew Colless,
Peter Connor,
A. J. Horton,
Steve Gibson,
Jon Lawrence,
Sarah L. Martell,
Peter McGregor,
Tom Nicolle,
Kathryn Nield,
David Orr,
J. G. Robertson,
S. D. Ryder,
Andrew Sheinis,
Greg Smith,
Nick Staszak,
Julia Tims,
Pascal Xavier,
P. Young,
Jessica Zheng
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
proceedings of spie, the international society for optical engineering/proceedings of spie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.192
H-Index - 176
eISSN - 1996-756X
pISSN - 0277-786X
DOI - 10.1117/12.925746
Subject(s) - spectrograph , optics , spectral resolution , physics , grating , observatory , astronomy , spectral line
The Gemini High-Resolution Optical SpecTrograph (GHOST) will fill an important gap in the current suite of Gemini instruments. We will describe the Australian Astronomical Observatory (AAO)-led concept for GHOST, which consists of a multi-object, compact, high-efficiency, fixed-format, fiber-fed design. The spectrograph itself is a four-arm variant of the asymmetric white-pupil echelle Kiwispec spectrograph, Kiwisped, produced by Industrial Research Ltd. This spectrograph has an R4 grating and a 100mm pupil, and separate cross-disperser and camera optics for each of the four arms, carefully optimized for their respective wavelength ranges. We feed this spectrograph with a miniature lenslet-based IFU that sub-samples the seeing disk of a single object into 7 hexagonal sub-images, reformatting this into a slit with a second set of double microlenses at the spectrograph entrance with relatively little loss due to focal-ratio degradation. This reformatting enables high spectral resolution from a compact design that fits well within the relatively tight GHOST budget. We will describe our baseline 2-object R∼50,000 design with full wavelength coverage from the ultraviolet to the silicon cutoff, as well as the high-resolution single-object R∼75,000 mode.13 page(s

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