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Colorado's near-infrared camera (a.k.a. NIC-FPS) commissioning on the ARC 3.5M telescope

Authors :
Stephane Beland
Fred Hearty
James C. Green
Patrick Hartigan
Meredith M. Drosback
Carl Schmidt
Nathaniel J. Cunningham
J. C. Barentine
Joshua Walawender
Anton Bondarenko
Robert Valentine
Jon A. Morse
Cynthia S. Froning
Source :
SPIE Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
SPIE, 2005.

Abstract

A second generation near-infrared instrument was built by the University of Colorado for the ARC 3.5 meter telescope and is being commissioned at the Apache Point Observatory. An initial engineering run, first light, commissioning observations, and initial facility science operations have been accomplished in the last year. Instrument imaging performance was good to excellent from first light and consortium observers began to employ the instrument on a shared-risk basis immediately after commissioning operations. Instrument optical and mechanical performance during this testing and operations phase are discussed. Detector system (Rockwell Hawaii-1RG 1024x1024 HgCdTe focal plane array with Leach controller) characteristics during these early operations are detailed along with ongoing efforts for system optimization. High resolution (R~10,000) spectroscopy is planned employing a Queensgate (now IC Optical) cryogenic Fabry-Perot etalon, though mechanical difficulties with the etalon precluded a system performance demonstration. The Consortium has decided that the instrument will retain the name NIC-FPS (Near Infrared Camera and Fabry-Perot Spectrometer) after commissioning.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2bdc8d1b04cd3aa1e0adcf5a2c5939c0