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8 July 2014An overview and the current status of instrumentation at the Large Binocular Telescope Observatory
An overview of instrumentation for the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) is presented. Optical instrumentation
includes the Large Binocular Camera (LBC), a pair of wide-field (24′ × 24′) mosaic CCD imagers at the prime
focus, and the Multi-Object Double Spectrograph (MODS), a pair of dual-beam blue-red optimized long-slit
spectrographs mounted at the left and right direct F/15 Gregorian foci incorporating multiple slit masks for
multi-object spectroscopy over a 6′ field and spectral resolutions of up to 2000. Infrared instrumentation includes
the LBT Near-IR Spectrometer (LUCI), a modular near–infrared (0.9-2.5 μm) imager and spectrograph pair
mounted at the left and right front–bent F/15 Gregorian foci and designed for seeing-limited (FOV: 4′ × 4′)
imaging, long-slit spectroscopy, and multi-object spectroscopy utilizing cooled slit masks and diffraction limited
(FOV: 0'.5 x 0'.5) imaging and long-slit spectroscopy. Strategic instruments under development that can utilize
the full 23 m baseline of the LBT include an interferometric cryogenic beam combiner with near-infrared and
thermal-infrared instruments for Fizeau imaging and nulling interferometry (LBTI) and an optical bench near-
infrared beam combiner utilizing multi-conjugate adaptive optics for high angular resolution and sensitivity
(LINC-NIRVANA). LBTI is currently undergoing commissioning and performing science observations on the
LBT utilizing the installed adaptive secondary mirrors in both single–sided and two–sided beam combination
modes. In addition, a fiber-fed bench spectrograph (PEPSI) capable of ultra high resolution spectroscopy and
spectropolarimetry (R = 40,000-300,000) will be available as a principal investigator instrument. Installation
and testing of the bench spectrograph will begin in July 2014. Over the past four years the LBC pair, LUCI1, and
MODS1 have been commissioned and are now scheduled for routine partner science observations. Both LUCI2
and MODS2 passed their laboratory acceptance milestones in the summer of 2013 and have been installed on
the LBT. LUCI2 is currently being commissioned and the data analysis is well underway. Diffraction–limited
commissioning of its adaptive optics modes will begin in the 2014B semester. MODS2 commissioning began in
May 2014 and will completed in the 2014B semester as well. Binocular testing and commissioning of both the
LUCI and MODS pairs will begin in 2014B with the goal that this capability could be offered sometime in 2015.
The availability of all these instruments mounted simultaneously on the LBT permits unique science, flexible
scheduling, and improved operational support.
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R. Mark Wagner, Michelle L. Edwards, Olga Kuhn, David Thompson, Christian Veillet, "An overview and the current status of instrumentation at the Large Binocular Telescope Observatory," Proc. SPIE 9147, Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy V, 914705 (8 July 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2056787