Bibcode
Balcells, M.; Benn, Chris R.; Carter, David; Dalton, Gavin B.; Trager, Scott C.; Feltzing, Sofia; Verheijen, Mark A. W.; Jarvis, Matt; Percival, Will; Abrams, Don C.; Agocs, Tibor; Brown, Anthony G. A.; Cano, Diego; Evans, Chris; Helmi, Amina; Lewis, Ian J.; McLure, Ross; Peletier, Reynier F.; Pérez-Fournon, I.; Sharples, Ray M.; Tosh, Ian A. J.; Trujillo, I.; Walton, Nic; Westhall, Kyle B.
Referencia bibliográfica
Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy III. Edited by McLean, Ian S.; Ramsay, Suzanne K.; Takami, Hideki. Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 7735, pp. 77357G-77357G-15 (2010).
Fecha de publicación:
7
2010
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
Wide-field multi-object spectroscopy is a high priority for European
astronomy over the next decade. Most 8-10m telescopes have a small field
of view, making 4-m class telescopes a particularly attractive option
for wide-field instruments. We present a science case and design drivers
for a wide-field multi-object spectrograph (MOS) with integral field
units for the 4.2-m William Herschel Telescope (WHT) on La Palma. The
instrument intends to take advantage of a future prime-focus corrector
and atmospheric-dispersion corrector (Agocs et al, this conf.) that will
deliver a field of view 2 deg in diameter, with good throughput from 370
to 1,000 nm. The science programs cluster into three groups needing
three different resolving powers R: (1) high-precision radial-velocities
for Gaia-related Milky Way dynamics, cosmological redshift surveys, and
galaxy evolution studies (R = 5,000), (2) galaxy disk velocity
dispersions (R = 10,000) and (3) high-precision stellar element
abundances for Milky Way archaeology (R = 20,000). The multiplex
requirements of the different science cases range from a few hundred to
a few thousand, and a range of fibre-positioner technologies are
considered. Several options for the spectrograph are discussed, building
in part on published design studies for E-ELT spectrographs. Indeed, a
WHT MOS will not only efficiently deliver data for exploitation of
important imaging surveys planned for the coming decade, but will also
serve as a test-bed to optimize the design of MOS instruments for the
future E-ELT.