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arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018

Sphinx: a massively multiplexed fiber positioner for MSE

Scott Smedley; Gabriella Baker; Rebecca Brown; James Gilbert; Peter Gillingham; Will Saunders; Andrew Sheinis; Sudharshan Venkatesan; Lewis Waller

In this paper we present the Australian Astronomical Observatory’s concept design for Sphinx - a fiber positioner with 4,332 “spines” on a 7.77mm pitch for CFHT’s Mauna Kea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE) Telescope. Based on the Echidna technology used with FMOS (on Subaru) and 4MOST (on VISTA), the next evolution of the tilting spine design delivers improved performance and superior allocation efficiency. Several prototypes have been constructed that demonstrate the suitability of the new design for MSE. Results of prototype testing are presented, along with an analysis of the impact of tilting spines on the overall survey efficiency. The Sphinx fiber positioner utilizes a novel metrology system for spine position feedback. The metrology design and the careful considerations required to achieve reliable, high accuracy measurements of all fibers in a realistic telescope environment are also presented.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

The MANIFEST prototyping design study

Jonathan Lawrence; Sagi Ben-Ami; David M. Brown; Rebecca Brown; Scott W. Case; Steve Chapman; Vladimir Churilov; Matthew Colless; D. L. DePoy; Ian Evans; Tony Farrell; Michael Goodwin; George H. Jacoby; Urs Klauser; K. Kuehn; Nuria P. F. Lorente; Slavko Mali; J. L. Marshall; Rolf Müller; Vijay Nichani; Naveen Pai; Travis Prochaska; Will Saunders; Luke M. Schmidt; Keith Shortridge; Nicholas F. Staszak; Andrew Szentgyorgyi; Julia Tims; Minh Vuong; Lewis Waller

MANIFEST is a facility multi-object fibre system for the Giant Magellan Telescope, which uses ‘Starbug’ fibre positioning robots. MANIFEST, when coupled to the telescope’s planned seeing-limited instruments, GMACS, and G-CLEF, offers access to: larger fields of view; higher multiplex gains; versatile reformatting of the focal plane via IFUs; image-slicers; and in some cases higher spatial and spectral resolution. The Prototyping Design Study phase for MANIFEST, nearing completion, has focused on developing a working prototype of a Starbugs system, called TAIPAN, for the UK Schmidt Telescope, which will conduct a stellar and galaxy survey of the Southern sky. The Prototyping Design Study has also included work on the GMT instrument interfaces. In this paper, we outline the instrument design features of TAIPAN, highlight the modifications that will be necessary for the MANIFEST implementation, and provide an update on the MANIFEST/instrument interfaces.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

TAIPAN instrument fibre positioner and Starbug robots: engineering overview

Nicholas F. Staszak; Jon Lawrence; David M. Brown; Rebecca Brown; Ross Zhelem; Michael Goodwin; K. Kuehn; Nuria P. F. Lorente; Vijay Nichani; Lew Waller; Scott W. Case; Andrew M. Hopkins; Urs Klauser; Naveen Pai; Rolf Mueller; Slavko Mali; Minh Vuong

TAIPAN will conduct a stellar and galaxy survey of the Southern sky. The TAIPAN positioner is being developed as a prototype for the MANIFEST instrument on the GMT. The design for TAIPAN incorporates 150 optical fibres (with an upgrade path to 300) situated within independently controlled robotic positioners known as Starbugs. Starbugs allow precise parallel positioning of individual fibres, thus significantly reducing instrument configuration time and increasing the amount of observing time. Presented is an engineering overview of the UKST upgrade of the completely new Instrument Spider Assembly utilized to support the Starbug Fibre Positioning Robot and current status of the Starbug itself.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

TAIPAN fibre feed and spectrograph: engineering overview

Nicholas F. Staszak; Jon Lawrence; Ross Zhelem; Vladimir Churilov; Scott W. Case; Rebecca Brown; Andrew M. Hopkins; K. Kuehn; Naveen Pai; Urs Klauser; Vijay Nichani; Lew Waller

TAIPAN will conduct a stellar and galaxy survey of the Southern sky. The TAIPAN positioner is being developed as a prototype for the MANIFEST instrument on the GMT. The TAIPAN Spectrograph is an AAO designed all-refractive 2-arm design that delivers a spectral resolution of R>2000 over the wavelength range 370-870 nm. It is fed by a custom fibre cable from the TAIPAN Starbugs positioner. The design for TAIPAN incorporates 150 optical fibres (with an upgrade path to 300). Presented is an engineering overview of the UKST Fibre Cable design used to support Starbugs, the custom slit design, and the overall design and build plan for the TAIPAN Spectrograph.


Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII 2018 | 2018

AESOP: the 4MOST fiber positioner

Jurek Brzeski; Gabriella Baker; Sufyan Baker; Rebecca Brown; Scott W. Case; Tony Farrell; Peter Gillingham; Urs Klauser; Jon Lawrence; Slavko Mali; Rolf Müller; Vijay Nichani; Naveen Pai; Scott Smedley; Sudharshan Venkatesan; Lew Waller

The Australian Astronomical Observatory’s (AAO’s) AESOP project is part of the 4 metre Multi-Object Spectrograph Telescope (4MOST) system for the VISTA telescope. It includes the 2436-fiber positioner, space frame and electronics enclosures. The AESOP concept and the role of the AAO in the 4MOST project have been described in previous SPIE proceedings. Prototype tests, which were completed early in 2017 demonstrated that the instrument requirements are satisfied by the design. The project final design stage has recently been completed. In this paper, key features of the AESOP positioning system design, along with the techniques developed to overcome key mechanical, electronic, and software engineering challenges are described. The major performance requirement for AESOP is that all 2436 science fiber cores and 12 guide fiber bundles are to be re-positioned to an accuracy of 10 µm within 1 minute. With a fast prime-focus focal-ratio, a close tolerance on the axial position of the fiber tips must be held so efficiency does not suffer from de-focus losses. Positioning accuracy is controlled with the metrology cameras installed on the telescope, which measures the positions of the fiber tips to an accuracy of a few µm and allows iterative positioning until all fiber tips are within tolerance. Maintaining co-planarity of the fiber tips requires accurate control in the assembly of several components that contribute to such errors. Assembly jigs have been developed and proven adequate for this purpose. Attaining high reliability in an assembly with many small components of disparate materials bonded together, including piezo ceramics, carbon fiber reinforced plastic, hardened steel, and electrical circuit boards, has entailed careful selection and application of cements and tightly controlled soldering for electrical connections.


Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII | 2018

TAIPAN: the AAO's first Starbug positioner and spectrograph (Conference Presentation)

Helen McGregor; Nuria P. F. Lorente; K. Kuehn; Jonathan Lawrence; Carlos Bacigalupo; David M. Brown; Rebecca Brown; Scott W. Case; Steve Chapman; Vladimir Churilov; Tony Farrell; Michael Goodwin; Urs Klauser; Slavko Mali; Rolf Müller; Vijay Nichani; Naveen Pai; Scott Smedley; Minh Vuong; Lewis Waller; Ross Zhelem

The AAO’s TAIPAN instrument is a multi-object fibre positioner and spectrograph installed on the 1.2m UK-Schmidt telescope at Siding Spring Observatory. The positioner, a prototype for the MANIFEST positioner on the Giant Magellan Telescope, uses independently controlled Starbug robots to position a maximum of 300 optical fibres on a 32cm glass field plate (for a 6 degree field of view), to an accuracy of 5 microns (0.3 arcsec). The Starbug technology allows multi-object spectroscopy to be carried out with a minimum of overhead between observations, significantly decreasing field configuration time. Over the next 5 years the TAIPAN instrument will be used for two southern-hemisphere surveys: Taipan, a spectroscopic survey of 1x10^6 galaxies at z<0.3, and FunnelWeb, a stellar survey complete to Gaia G=12.5. In this paper we present an overview of the operational TAIPAN instrument: its design, construction and integration, and discuss the 2017 commissioning campaign and science verification results obtained in early 2018.


Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII | 2018

Wide-field multi-object spectroscopy with MANIFEST

Jonathan Lawrence; David M. Brown; Matthew Colless; D. M. Faes; Tony Farrell; Michael Goodwin; K. Kuehn; Will Saunders; Lewis Waller; Claudia Mendes de Oliveira; Henrique Ortolan; Sagi Ben-Ami; Rebecca Brown; Scott W. Case; Timothy Chin; Adam Contos; Nuria P. F. Lorente; Ross Zhelem; D. L. DePoy; Ian Evans; Peter Gillingham; Sungwook E. Hong; Narae Hwang; Wong-Seob Jeong; Urs Klauser; Slavko Mali; J. L. Marshall; Helen McGregor; Rolf Müller; Rafael Millan-Gabet

MANIFEST is a multi-object fibre facility for the Giant Magellan Telescope that uses ‘Starbug’ robots to accurately position fibre units across the telescope’s focal plane. MANIFEST, when coupled to the telescope’s planned seeinglimited instruments, offers access to larger fields of view; higher multiplex gains; versatile focal plane reformatting of the focal plane via integral-field-units; image-slicers; and in some cases higher spatial and spectral resolution. The TAIPAN instrument on the UK Schmidt Telescope is now close to science verification which will demonstrate the feasibility of the Starbug concept. We are now moving into the conceptual development phase for MANIFEST, with a focus on developing interfaces for the telescope and for the instruments.


Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII | 2018

Performance of the first production-ready actuators for the 4MOST-AESOP fiber positioner

Jurek Brzeski; Sufyan Baker; Scott W. Case; Urs Klauser; Jon Lawrence; Slavko Mali; Rolf Müller; Vijay Nichani; Naveen Pai; Scott Smedley; Gabriella Baker; Rebecca Brown; Peter Gillingham; Sudharshan Venkatesan; Lewis Waller

In this paper we present recent progress on the Australian Astronomical Observatory’s AESOP2 fiber positioner for 4MOST (on VISTA). As an evolution of the Echidna “spine” technology used for FMOS (on Subaru), AESOP has challenging requirements to position 2,448 fibers in parallel, within 1 minute, to an accuracy of < 10 um RMS. AESOP successfully passed ESO’s official final design review and manufacturing has commenced. We present performance results from the first batch of newly-manufactured positioners and also report on how the AESOP project is tracking in terms of schedule, budget and risk.


Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII | 2018

Hector: a modular integral field spectrograph instrument for the Anglo-Australian Telescope

Helen McGregor; Jesse van de Sande; Julia J. Bryant; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Jonathan Lawrence; Will Saunders; Ross Zhelem; Sudharshan Venkatesan; Peter Gillingham; Robert Patterson; Scott M. Croom; Warrick J. Couch; Richard M. McDermid; Rebecca Brown; Sergio G. Leon-Saval; Adeline Wang; Mahesh Mohanan

Based on the success of the SAMI integral field spectrograph (IFS) instrument on the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT) the capacity for large IFS nearby galaxy surveys on the AAT is being substantially expanded with a new instrument called Hector. The high filling-fraction imaging fibre bundles ‘hexabundles’ of the type used on SAMI, are being enlarged to cover up to 30-arcsec diameter. The aim is to reach two effective radii on most galaxies, where the galaxy rotation curve flattens and >75% of the specific angular momentum of disk galaxies is accounted for. Driven by the key science case, Hector will have a 1.3A spectral resolution, enabling high-order stellar kinematics to be measured on a larger fraction of galaxies than with any other IFS instrument. Hector will be on sky in 2019. The first module of Hector, Hector-I, will have 21 hexabundles and >42 sky fibres to observe 20 galaxies and a calibration star simultaneously. It consists of new blue and red-arm spectrographs that have been designed at the Australian Astronomical Observatory (AAO; now called AAO-Macquarie), coupled to the new hexabundles and robotic positioner from AAO-USydney (formerly the Sydney Astrophotonics Instrumentation Laboratory, SAIL) at Sydney University. A novel robotic positioning concept will compensate for varying telecentricity over the 2-degree-field of the AAT to recoup the 20% loss in light at the edge of the field. Hector-I will survey 15,000 galaxies. Additional modules in the future would result in 30,000 galaxies. Hector will take integral field spectroscopy on galaxies with z<0.15 in the 4MOST WAVES-North and WAVES-South∗ regions. The WAVES data, which will come later, will give the environment metrics neces- sary to relate how local and global environments influence galaxy growth through gas accretion, star formation and spins measured with Hector. The WALLABY ASKAP† survey will trace HI gas across the Hector fields, which in combination with Hector will give a complete view of gas accretion and star formation.


Advances in Optical and Mechanical Technologies for Telescopes and Instrumentation III | 2018

Acquisition and guiding for TAIPAN using Starbugs

David M. Brown; Michael Goodwin; Carlos Bacigalupo; K. Kuehn; Scott W. Case; Nuria P. F. Lorente; Rebecca Brown; Tony Farrell

The AAO Starbugs is a multi-functional positioning device used in the TAIPAN instrument currently being commissioned on the UK Schmidt Telescope at Siding Spring Observatory in Australia. TAIPAN is part of a design study for MANIFEST which is a fibre positioning instrument proposed for the Giant Magellan Telescope. The acquisition and guiding system for TAIPAN uses nine standard Starbugs, referred to as Guide Bugs. Each one uses a 7000 core coherent polymer fibre bundle on individual guide stars. This provides an astrometric reference frame for science fibre positioning, telescope guiding, instrument alignment and focus, all of which are invariant to telescope and atmospheric geometric anomalies. Guide Bugs are a technology that will enable improved science results for the TAIPAN instrument. In this paper we outline the design features and provide an update on software development.

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K. Kuehn

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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Urs Klauser

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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Naveen Pai

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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Slavko Mali

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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Vijay Nichani

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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David M. Brown

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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Lewis Waller

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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Michael Goodwin

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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Nuria P. F. Lorente

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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