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Title: | The development of HISPEC for Keck and MODHIS for TMT: science cases and predicted sensitivities |
Authors: | Konopacky, Quinn M Baker, Ashley D Mawet, Dimitri Fitzgerald, Michael P Jovanovic, Nemanja Beichman, Charles Ruane, Garreth Bertz, Rob Terada, Hiroshi Dekany, Richard Lingvay, Larry Kassis, Marc Anderson, David Tamura, Motohide Benneke, Bjorn Beatty, Thomas Do, Tuan Nishiyama, Shogo Plavchan, Peter Wang, Jason Wang, Ji Burgasser, Adam Ruffio, Jean-Baptiste Zhang, Huihao Brown, Aaron Fucik, Jason Gibbs, Aidan Gibson, Rose Halverson, Sam Johnson, Christopher Karkar, Sonia Kotani, Takayuki Kress, Evan Leifer, Stephanie Magnone, Kenneth Maire, Jerome Pahuja, Rishi Porter, Michael Roberts, Mitsuko Sappey, Ben Thorne, Jim Wang, Eric Artigau, Etienne Blake, Geoffrey A Canalizo, Gabriela Chen, Guo Doppmann, Greg Doyon, Rene Dressing, Courtney Fang, Min Greene, Thomas Herczeg, Greg Hillenbrand, Lynne Howard, Andrew Kane, Stephen Kataria, Tiffany Kempton, Eliza Knutson, Heather Lafrenière, David Liu, Chao Metchev, Stanimir Millar-Blanchaer, Max Narita, Norio Pandey, G Rajaguru, S. P Robertson, Paul Salyk, Colette Sato, Bun’ei Schlawin, Evertt Sengupta, S Sivarani, T Skidmore, Warren Vasisht, Gautam Yasui, Chikako Zhang, Hui |
Keywords: | Spectrometers High resolution spectroscopy Spectropolarimetry Radial velocities Infrared astronomy Exoplanets Exoplanet detection methods Exoplanet atmospheres |
Issue Date: | Oct-2023 |
Publisher: | SPIE-The International Society for Optical Engineering |
Citation: | Proceedings of the SPIE, Vol. 12680, pp. 1268007 25 |
Abstract: | HISPEC is a new, high-resolution near-infrared spectrograph being designed for the W.M. Keck II telescope. By offering single-shot, R 100,000 spectroscopy between 0.98 – 2.5 µm, HISPEC will enable spectroscopy of transiting and non-transiting exoplanets in close orbits, direct high-contrast detection and spectroscopy of spatially separated substellar companions, and exoplanet dynamical mass and orbit measurements using precision radial velocity monitoring calibrated with a suite of state-of-the-art absolute and relative wavelength references. MODHIS is the counterpart to HISPEC for the Thirty Meter Telescope and is being developed in parallel with similar scientific goals. In this proceeding, we provide a brief overview of the current design of both instruments, and the requirements for the two spectrographs as guided by the scientific goals for each. We then outline the current science case for HISPEC and MODHIS, with focuses on the science enabled for exoplanet discovery and characterization. We also provide updated sensitivity curves for both instruments, in terms of both signal-to-noise ratio and predicted radial velocity precision. |
Description: | Restricted Access |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8310 |
ISSN: | 0277-786X |
Appears in Collections: | IIAP Publications |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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The development of HISPEC for Keck and MODHIS for TMT science.pdf Restricted Access | 3.06 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open Request a copy |
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