Abstract

ABSTRACT A new faint-object spectrograph has been designed around the capabilities of fiber optics. This instrument, the Norris Spectrograph, is for exclusive use at the Cassegrain focus (f/16) of The Hale Telescope and is optimized for faint galaxy spectroscopy. There are 176 independently positionable fibers that are serially manipulated by a single robotic system. Each of these fibers sees 1.6 arcsec on the sky and the total positionable area is in excess of 300 sq. arcmins (about 0.1 sq. degrees). Unlike most multi-object spectrographs which utilize fibers that are several tens of meters long, the philosophy of the design of the Norris was quite the antithesis, i.e., to minimize the fiber lengths; hence, it is an entirely self-contained telescope-mounted instrument for the Cassegrain focus. The instrument consists of an integrated xy stage for the fiber positioning and an attached optical spectrograph. The design of the spectrograph is basically classical: spherical collimator mirror, standard reflection grating, and a newly designed all-transmissive-optics camera lens. The detector currently used is a thinned, AR-coated 2048 X 2048 Tektronix CCD. Fibers are arranged in two linear opposing banks that can access the twenty arc minute diameter field-of-view (FOV) of the instrument. The accuracy of fiber placement (assuming errorless coordinates) is less than 0.1 arcsec over the entire FOV. Fibers may be placed as close as 16 arcsec. This permits close pairings of fibers for very faint object spectroscopy. Beam switching between paired fibers, as was done with two-channel spectrographs of yesteryear, will help average out temporal and spatial variations of the light of the night sky. Actual observations performed in this mode of operation indicate that the quality of the sky subtraction improves, as would be expected. The density of paired fibers within the Norris FOV matches the approximate density of faint field galaxies expected to a blue magnitude of 21. Software exists to take object lists (alpha, delta) and convert them to rectlinear (x,y) values (mm) on the xy stage by gnomonic projection and to assign fibers. This software also corrects for precession of the equinoxes, proper motion if epoch differences exist, and corrects for atmospheric refraction. To place a single fiber takes approximately five seconds on the average. A lower limit to the efficiency of the spectrograph plus telescope has been estimated to be 6.8% at 5500A. In order to derive the throughput of the instrument, the efficiency of the telescope, estimated to be approximately 56%, must divided out. This value is consistent with the expectation that the reduction in efficiency from that of a standard CCD spectrograph such as The Hale Telescope's Double Spectrograph will be about a factor of two. This results from the 60-70% transmittance of the fibers and other losses. The spectra produced are linear with little distortion. With 10A spectral resolution, fitting residuals on the order of 100 km sec-1 are easily obtainable by modelling the dispersion by a third order polynomial. The resolutions currently available range from 1A to about 20A. The spectra have a FWHM in the direction perpendicular to that of the dispersion of about 90 microns, or equivalently about three 27 micron pixels found in the older Tektronix 2048 CCD's. The inter-order spacing of 250 microns is large enough to permit clean spectrum extractions. The instrument has been in use for several years. The scientific programs vary from high resolution (1A resolution) spectroscopy of stars in nearby globular clusters to a low spectral resolution (10A) survey of faint field galaxies. In this latter survey, with typical two hour exposures, absorption-line redshifts as high as z~0.5 have been routinely measured. Several heretofore unknown quasars with redshifts around three have also been discovered serendipitously.

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