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The Optical Corrector for the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument

Authors :
Miller, Timothy N.
Doel, Peter
Gutierrez, Gaston
Besuner, Robert
Brooks, David
Gallo, Giuseppe
Heetderks, Henry
Jelinsky, Patrick
Kent, Stephen M.
Lampton, Michael
Levi, Michael
Liang, Ming
Meisner, Aaron
Sholl, Michael J.
Silber, Joseph Harry
Sprayberry, David
Aguilar, Jessica Nicole
de la Macorra, Axel
Eisenstein, Daniel
Fanning, Kevin
Font-Ribera, Andreu
Gaztanaga, Enrique
Gontcho, Satya Gontcho A
Honscheid, Klaus
Jimenez, Jorge
Joyce, Dick
Kehoe, Robert
Kisner, Theodore
Kremin, Anthony
Landriau, Martin
Guillou, Laurent Le
Magneville, Christophe
Martini, Paul
Miquel, Ramon
Moustakas, John
Nie, Jundan
Percival, Will
Poppett, Claire
Prada, Francisco
Rossi, Graziano
Schlegel, David
Schubnell, Michael
Seo, Hee-Jong
Sharples, Ray
Tarle, Gregory
Vargas-Magana, Mariana
Zhou, Zhimin
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) is currently measuring the spectra of 40\,million galaxies and quasars, the largest such survey ever made to probe the nature of cosmological dark energy. The 4-meter Mayall telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory has been adapted for DESI, including the construction of a 3.2-degree diameter prime focus corrector that focuses astronomical light onto a 0.8-meter diameter focal surface with excellent image quality over the DESI bandpass of 360-980nm. The wide-field corrector includes six lenses, as large as 1.1-meters in diameter and as heavy as 237\,kilograms, including two counter-rotating wedged lenses that correct for atmospheric dispersion over Zenith angles from 0 to 60 degrees. The lenses, cells, and barrel assembly all meet precise alignment tolerances on the order of tens of microns. The barrel alignment is maintained throughout a range of observing angles and temperature excursions in the Mayall dome by use of a hexapod, which is itself supported by a new cage, ring, and truss structure. In this paper we describe the design, fabrication, and performance of the new corrector and associated structure, focusing on how they meet DESI requirements. In particular we describe the prescription and specifications of the lenses, design choices and error budgeting of the barrel assembly, stray light mitigations, and integration and test at the Mayall telescope. We conclude with some validation highlights that demonstrate the successful corrector on-sky performance, and list some lessons learned during the multi-year fabrication phase.<br />Comment: 68 pages, 56 figures, 22 tables. Submitted to the Astronomical Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2306.06310
Document Type :
Working Paper