Artigo Acesso aberto Produção Nacional

The Eucalyptus spectrograph

2003; SPIE; Volume: 4841; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1117/12.461975

ISSN

1996-756X

Autores

Celso José Bruno de Oliveira, B. Barbuy, Rodrigo P. Campos, B. V. Castilho, Clemens D. Gneiding, A. Kanaan, David Lee, J. R. D. Lépine, Claudia M. de Oliveira, Ligia S. de Oliveira, Francisco Rodrigues, J. M. Silva, César Strauss, Keith Taylor,

Tópico(s)

Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing

Resumo

As part of the Brazilian contribution to the 4.2 m SOAR telescope project we are building the Integral Field Unit spectrograph, "SIFUS." With the aim of testing the performance of optical fibers with 50 microns core size on IFUs, we constructed a prototype of the IFU and a spectrograph that were installed at the 1.6 m telescope of the Observatorio do Pico dos Dias (OPD), managed by Laboratorio Nacional de Astrofisica (LNA) in Brazil. The IFU has 512 fibers coupled to a LIMO microlens array (16 x 32) covering a 15" x 30" field on the sky. The spectrograph is a medium resolution instrument, operating in a quasi-Littrow mode. It was based on the design of the SPIRAL spectrograph built by the Anglo-Australian Observatory. The name Eucalyptus was given following the name of the native Australian tree that adapted very well in Brazil and it was given in recognition to the collaboration with the colleagues of the Anglo-Australian Observatory. The instrument first light occurred in the first semester of 2001. The results confirmed the possibility of using the adopted fibers and construction techniques for the SIFUS. We present the features of the instrument, some examples of the scientific data obtained, and the status of the commissioning, calibration and automation plans. The efficiency of this IFU was determined to be 53% during telescope commissioning tests.

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