Bibcode
Rosich Minguell, Josefina; Garzón Lopez, Francisco
Bibliographical reference
Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy IV. Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 8446, id. 84465A-84465A-12 (2012).
Advertised on:
9
2012
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
The Mid-resolution InfRAreD Astronomical Spectrograph (MIRADAS, a
near-infrared multi-object echelle spectrograph operating at spectral
resolution R=20,000 over the 1-2.5μm bandpass) was selected in 2010
by the Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) partnership as the next-generation
near-infrared spectrograph for the world's largest optical/infrared
telescope, and is being developed by an international consortium. The
MIRADAS consortium includes the University of Florida, Universidad de
Barcelona, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Instituto de
Astrofísica de Canarias, Institut de Física d'Altes
Energies, Institut d'Estudis Espacials de Catalunya and Universidad
Nacional Autónoma de México. This paper shows an overview
of the MIRADAS control software, which follows the standards defined by
the telescope to permit the integration of this software on the GTC
Control System (GCS). The MIRADAS Control System is based on a
distributed architecture according to a component model where every
subsystem is selfcontained. The GCS is a distributed environment written
in object oriented C++, which runs components in different computers,
using CORBA middleware for communications. Each MIRADAS observing mode,
including engineering, monitoring and calibration modes, will have its
own predefined sequence, which are executed in the GCS Sequencer. These
sequences will have the ability of communicating with other telescope
subsystems.