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29 June 2006A wide-field IR spectrograph for the Giant Magellan Telescope
The Giant Magellan Telescope, with seven 8.4 meter primary mirrors, is taking shape as one of the most powerful
telescopes of the next generation. We describe a conceptual design for a powerful 0.85 to 2.50 μm imaging
spectrograph that addresses a 7' by 7' field of view for imaging and a 5' by 7' field of view for spectroscopy at the
GMT's f/8 Gregorian focus. The all-refractive optical design presses the limits of available lens blank diameters, but
delivers excellent images (~0.15" 80% encircled energy) with just four collimator elements and five camera elements.
The collimated beam diameter is 300 mm, and the detector is a 6K by 10K array. The spectrograph will use
interchangeable slit masks, and an assortment of VPH and conventional surface relief gratings. Each of the entire J, H,
or K bands can be observed with a resolution of 3000. The scientific potential of ground layer adaptive optics (GLAO)
using a constellation of sodium laser guide stars appears to be very high in the near infrared. Simulations suggest that
0.2" FWHM images may be achieved across the entire 7' by 7' field of view of the spectrograph. We describe the
design of the GLAO system with a versatile opto-mechanical design that allows rapid changeover between GLAO and
seeing-limited observations.
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Daniel Fabricant, Edward Hertz, Warren Brown, Brian McLeod, Roger Angel, Michael Lloyd-Hart, "A wide-field IR spectrograph for the Giant Magellan Telescope," Proc. SPIE 6269, Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy, 62691Z (29 June 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.672620