Presentation + Paper
29 August 2022 What could KIDSpec, a new MKID spectrograph, do on the ELT?
V. Benedict Hofmann, Kieran O'Brien, Deli Geng
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Microwave Kinetic Inductance Detectors (MKIDs) are beginning to become more prominent in astronomical instrumentation, due to their sensitivity, low noise, high pixel count for superconducting detectors, and inherent energy and time resolving capability. The Kinetic Inductance Detector Spectrometer (KIDSpec) will take advantage of these features, KIDSpec is a medium resolution MKID spectrograph for the optical/near infrared. KIDSpec will contribute to many science areas particularly those involving short and/or faint observations. When short period binary systems are found, typical CCD detectors will struggle to characterise these systems due to the very short exposures required, causing errors as large as the estimated parameter itself. The KIDSpec Simulator (KSIM) has been developed to investigate how much KIDSpec could improve on this. KIDSpec was simulated on an ELT class telescope to find the extent of its potential, and it was found that KIDSpec could observe a mV ≈ 24 with an SNR of 5 for a 10s exposure at 1420 spectral resolution. This would mean that KIDSpec on an ELT class telescope could spectroscopically follow up on any LSST photometric discoveries of LISA verification sources.
Conference Presentation
© (2022) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
V. Benedict Hofmann, Kieran O'Brien, and Deli Geng "What could KIDSpec, a new MKID spectrograph, do on the ELT?", Proc. SPIE 12184, Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy IX, 1218419 (29 August 2022); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2628889
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Device simulation

Spectral resolution

Telescopes

Spectrographs

Spectroscopy

Large Synoptic Survey Telescope

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