Poster + Paper
13 December 2020 Arrayed wide-angle camera system for wide field imaging and spectroscopy on ELTs: proof-of-concept on-sky test results on McDonald Observatory 2.7m telescope
Author Affiliations +
Conference Poster
Abstract
The next generation Extremely Large Telescopes (ELTs) are promising a profound transformation of our understanding of the universe through large-scale surveys of a myriad of previously unseen astronomical objects across cosmic space-time. For such surveys, the ELTs will need a super-efficient field corrector (FC) that can expand their field of view over a broad wavelength range, thus enabling multi-object spectroscopy using multiple back-end instruments. Arrayed Wide-Angle Camera System (AWACS) is built on the segmented FC architecture that can break the limits of monolithic design in scaling to the ELTs and beyond. AWACS accomplishes desired field expansion via a suite of small cost-effective electro-opto-mechanical units over a telescope’s focal surface that compensates for telescope field aberrations and atmospheric dispersion, locally and simultaneously. We constructed a dual-unit proof-of-concept AWACS and tested the adaptive aberration correction on sky as detailed in this paper.
© (2020) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Hanshin Lee, John M. Good, Brian L. Vattiat, and Menelaos K. Poutous "Arrayed wide-angle camera system for wide field imaging and spectroscopy on ELTs: proof-of-concept on-sky test results on McDonald Observatory 2.7m telescope", Proc. SPIE 11445, Ground-based and Airborne Telescopes VIII, 114453W (13 December 2020); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2562586
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KEYWORDS
Telescopes

Imaging spectroscopy

Imaging systems

Cameras

Field spectroscopy

Lenses

Observatories

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