Paper
9 August 2016 Development of the fibre positioning unit of MOONS
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Abstract
The Multi-Object Optical and Near-Infrared Spectrograph (MOONS) will exploit the full 500 square arcmin field of view offered by the Nasmyth focus of the Very Large Telescope and will be equipped with two identical triple arm cryogenic spectrographs covering the wavelength range 0.64μm-1.8μm, with a multiplex capability of over 1000 fibres. This can be configured to produce spectra for chosen targets and have close proximity sky subtraction if required. The system will have both a medium resolution (R~4000-6000) mode and a high resolution (R~20000) mode. The fibre positioning units are used to position each fibre independently in order to pick off each sub field of 1.0” within a circular patrol area of ~85” on sky (50mm physical diameter). The nominal physical separation between FPUs is 25mm allowing a 100% overlap in coverage between adjacent units. The design of the fibre positioning units allows parallel and rapid reconfiguration between observations. The kinematic geometry is such that pupil alignment is maintained over the patrol area. This paper presents the design of the Fibre Positioning Units at the preliminary design review and the results of verification testing of the advanced prototypes.
© (2016) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
David Montgomery, David Atkinson, Stephen Beard, William Cochrane, Holger Drass, Isabelle Guinouard, David Lee, William Taylor, Phil Rees, and Steve Watson "Development of the fibre positioning unit of MOONS", Proc. SPIE 9908, Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VI, 990895 (9 August 2016); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2234183
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Switches

Electronics

Prototyping

Computer programming

Spectrographs

Diodes

Astronomical imaging

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