Back to Search Start Over

Performance of the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) high-resolution near-infrared multi-object fiber spectrograph

Authors :
Mike Skrutskie
Diana Holder
Adam Burton
Matthew Shetrone
A. E. García Pérez
Bo Zhao
Jim Arns
Russell Owen
Mark A. Klaene
Bruce Gillespie
Demitri Muna
Frances Cope
Paul Maseman
F. Leger
Verne V. Smith
Basil Blank
Craig P. Loomis
R. Stoll
Tracy Naugle
Suvrath Mahadevan
Sophia Brunner
B. Pfaffenberger
Nicholas MacDonald
Robert H. Barkhouser
S. D. Chojnowski
J. Barr
Steven R. Majewski
Viktor Malanushenko
Wendell P. Jordan
George H. Rieke
Stephane Beland
T. Stolberg
Carlos Allende-Prieto
Matthew J. Nelson
M. Vernieri
Chuck Henderson
Howard Brewington
David H. Weinberg
Kaike Pan
Albert Harding
Marcia J. Rieke
Katia Cunha
Peter M. Frinchaboy
David J. Schlegel
Jon A. Holtzman
Thomas P. O'Brien
Larry N. Carey
S. A. Snedden
J. A. Johnson
John C. Wilson
Brett H. Andrews
Dan Long
Michael R. Hayden
E. Walker
Daniel J. Eisenstein
Ricardo P. Schiavon
Samuel Halverson
Sz. Meszaros
D. V. Bizyaev
James E. Gunn
David L. Nidever
Jeffrey D. Crane
Garrett Ebelke
Frederick R. Hearty
Charles R. Lam
A. Simmons
Greg Fitzgerald
Gail Zasowski
C. Harrison
Benjamin A. Weaver
Daniel Oravetz
Erick T. Young
J. Brinkmann
Fritz Stauffer
M. R. Blanton
T. Horne
Michael A. Carr
Stephen C. Hope
Stephen A. Smee
Elena Malanushenko
Source :
SPIE Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
SPIE, 2012.

Abstract

The Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) uses a dedicated 300-fiber, narrow-band near-infrared (1.51-1.7 μm), high resolution (R~22,500) spectrograph to survey approximately 100,000 giant stars across the Milky Way. This three-year survey, in operation since late-summer 2011 as part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III (SDSS III), will revolutionize our understanding of the kinematical and chemical enrichment histories of all Galactic stellar populations. We present the performance of the instrument from its first year in operation. The instrument is housed in a separate building adjacent to the 2.5-m SDSS telescope and fed light via approximately 45-meter fiber runs from the telescope. The instrument design includes numerous innovations including a gang connector that allows simultaneous connection of all fibers with a single plug to a telescope cartridge that positions the fibers on the sky, numerous places in the fiber train in which focal ratio degradation had to be minimized, a large mosaic-VPH (290 mm x 475 mm elliptically-shaped recorded area), an f/1.4 six-element refractive camera featuring silicon and fused silica elements with diameters as large as 393 mm, three near-infrared detectors mounted in a 1 x 3 mosaic with sub-pixel translation capability, and all of these components housed within a custom, LN2-cooled, stainless steel vacuum cryostat with dimensions 1.4-m x 2.3-m x 1.3-m.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0fa49a4d017e4fe6001ffbbe1581ed97
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.927140