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http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8668
Title: | SCALES Status Report |
Authors: | Stelter, R. Deno Skemer, Andrew J. Sallum, Stephanie MacDonald, Nicholas Kupke, Renate Ratlif, Christopher Bourgenot, Cyril Cabak, Gerald Gonzales, Michael Rodriguez, Cristian A. Hunter, Aaron Banyal, R. K Sivarani, T Fitzgerald, Michael P. Kassis, Marc Absil, Olivier Alvarez, Carlos Batalha, Natasha Boucher, Marc-Andre Brandt, Timothy Briesemeister, Zack Kleer, Katherine de Pater, Imke de Deich, William Divakar, Devika Gauvin, Etienne Greene, Thomas Hasan, Amirul Hinz, Philip Jensen-Clem, Rebecca Johnson, Christopher Govinda, K. V Kain, Isabel Lach, Mackenzie Landry, Jean-Thomas Liu, Michael C. Lyke, James Magnone, Kenneth Marin, Eduardo Martinez, Raquel A. Mawet, Dimitri McGurk, Rosalie Miles, Brittany Prakash, A Sandford, Dale Ramya, S Sheehan, Patrick Sohn, Ji Man Stone, Jordan Surya, Arun Varshney, Hari Mohan Wang, Eric |
Keywords: | Adaptive optics High-contrast Instrumentation Exoplanets Thermal infrared Integral field spectroscopy Slenslit |
Issue Date: | Jul-2024 |
Publisher: | SPIE - Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers |
Citation: | Proceedings of the SPIE, Vol. 13096, 1309619 |
Abstract: | SCALES (Slicer Combined with Array of Lenslets for Exoplanet Spectroscopy) is the next-generation, diffraction-limited, thermal infrared, fully cryogenic, coronagraphic exoplanet spectrograph and imager for W.M. Keck Observatory. SCALES is fed by the Keck II Adaptive Optics bench. Both modes use common fore-optics to simplify the optical design and have individual detectors, which are JWST flight spares. The imager mode operates from 1 to 5 microns with selectable narrow- and broadband filters over a field of view 12.3 arcseconds on a side, and the integral field spectrograph mode operates from 2 to 5 microns with both low and mid spectral resolutions (R∼ 100 to R∼ 7500) over a field of view 2.15 arcseconds on a side. The diamond-turned aluminum optics, most of which are already delivered, with the rest being fabricated, provide low distortion, low wavefront error, and high throughput for all modes. The slicing unit, located behind the lenslet array, allows SCALES to reach heretofore unheard-of spatially-resolved spectral resolution for exoplanet and disc observations from the ground with a coronagraphic integral field spectrograph. The SCALES consortium includes UC Observatories, CalTech, W.M. Keck Observatory, the Indian Institute of Astrophysics, and the University of Durham, with over 40 science team members. We report on the overall design and project status during its ongoing fabrication phase, which started in early 2023. |
Description: | Restricted Access |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8668 |
ISSN: | 0277-786X |
Appears in Collections: | IIAP Publications |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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SCALES Status Report.pdf Restricted Access | 15.52 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open Request a copy |
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