Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/2248/7367
Title: | High-resolution Infrared Spectrograph for Exoplanet Characterization with the Keck and Thirty Meter Telescopes |
Authors: | Mawet, Dimitri Fitzgerald, Michael Konopacky, Quinn Beichman, Charles Jovanovic, Nemanja Dekany, Richard Hover, David Chisholm, Eric Ciardi, David Artigau, Etienne Banyal, Ravinder Beatty, Thomas Benneke, Bjorn Blake, Geoffrey A Burgasser, Adam Canalizo, Gabriela Chen, Guo Do, Tuan Doppmann, Greg Doyon, Rene Dressing, Courtney Fang, Min Greene, Thomas Hillenbrand, Lynne Howard, Andrew Kane, Stephen Kataria, Tiffany Kempton, Eliza Knutson, Heather Kotani, Takayuki Lafreniere, David Liu, Chao Nishiyama, Shogo Pandey, G Plavchan, Peter Prato, Lisa Rajaguru, S. P Robertson, Paul Salyk, Colette Sato, Bun’ei Schlawin, Everett Sengupta, S Sivarani, T Skidmore, Warren Tamura, Motohide Terada, Hiroshi Vasisht, Gautam Wang, Ji Zhang, Hui |
Keywords: | Spectrograph HISPEC MODHIS |
Issue Date: | Sep-2019 |
Publisher: | American Astronomical Society |
Citation: | Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 51, No 7, 134 |
Abstract: | HISPEC (High-resolution Infrared Spectrograph for Exoplanet Characterization) is a proposed diffractionlimited spectrograph for the W.M. Keck Observatory, and a pathfinder for the MODHIS facility project (Multi-Object Diffraction-limited High-resolution Infrared Spectrograph) on the Thirty Meter Telescope. HISPEC/MODHIS builds on diffraction-limited spectrograph designs such as Palomar-PARVI and LBTiLocator, both of which rely on adaptively corrected single-mode fiber feeds. Seeing-limited highresolution spectrographs, by virtue of the conservation of beam etendue, grow in volume following a D 3 power law (D is the telescope diameter), and are subject to daunting challenges associated with their large size (e.g. mechanical and thermal stability). Diffraction-limited spectrographs fed by single mode fibers are decoupled from the telescope input, and are orders of magnitude more compact and have intrinsically more stable line spread functions. On the flip side, their efficiency is directly proportional to the performance of the adaptive optics (AO) system. AO technologies have matured rapidly over the past two decades, becoming mainstream on current large ground-based telescopes and baselined for future extremely large telescopes. HISPEC/MODHIS will take R>100,000 spectra of a few objects in a 10” field-of-view sampled at the diffraction limit (10 mas scale), simultaneously from 0.95 to 2.4 µm (y band to K band). The scientific scope ranges from exoplanet infrared precision radial velocities, transit and close-in exoplanet spectroscopy (atmospheric composition and dynamics, RM effect), spectroscopy of directly imaged planets (atmospheric composition, spin measurements, Doppler imaging), brown dwarf characterization, stellar physics/chemistry, proto-planetary disk kinematics/composition, Solar system (e.g. comets), extragalactic science, and cosmology. HISPEC/MODHIS features a compact and cost-effective design optimized to fully exploit the existing Keck-AO and future TMT-NFIRAOS infrastructures and boost the scientific reach of both Keck Observatory and TMT soon after first light. |
Description: | Restricted Access © American Astronomical Society https://baas.aas.org/pub/2020n7i134 |
URI: | http://prints.iiap.res.in/handle/2248/7367 |
ISSN: | 0002-7537 |
Appears in Collections: | IIAP Publications |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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High-resolution Infrared Spectrograph for Exoplanet Characterization with the Keck and Thirty Meter Telescopes.pdf | 2.1 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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