1 / 26

WEAVE The Next-Generation Wide Field Spectroscopy Facility fo r the WHT

Gavin Dalton ( RALSpace /Oxford) SPIE Amsterdam 8466-23. WEAVE The Next-Generation Wide Field Spectroscopy Facility fo r the WHT . + 115 members of the science team across Europe. Background. Community discussion meetings in early 2010 Summarised in Balcells et al. 2010 (SPIE)

uta
Download Presentation

WEAVE The Next-Generation Wide Field Spectroscopy Facility fo r the WHT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Gavin Dalton (RALSpace/Oxford) SPIE Amsterdam 8466-23 WEAVEThe Next-Generation Wide Field Spectroscopy Facility for the WHT

  2. + 115 members of the science team across Europe

  3. Background • Community discussion meetings in early 2010 • Summarised in Balcells et al. 2010 (SPIE) • Push for a new wide-field MOS instrument scoped for Gaia/LOFAR follow-up. • Phase A KO at SPIE 2010 • PDR phase 09/2011—02/2012 + 115 members of the science team across Europe.

  4. Science Overview Key science themes from community workshops: • What are the stellar content and stellar distribution in the Milky Way? • What is the nature of dark matter and dark energy? • How do galaxies form and evolve? • What are the contents, internal structures, and mechanisms of galaxies? • What is the role of environment and interactions in galaxy evolution?

  5. WEAVE/Gaia Survey Space WEAVE, R~5000 370-1000nm δvr < 5kms-1 δ[Fe/H] < 0.2 dex >106 stars 10000 deg2 Enough to measure Metallicity Distribution Function Figure courtesy Vanessa Hill, OCA

  6. WEAVE/Gaia Survey Space WEAVE, R~20000 δvr < 1kms-1 δ[Fe/H] < 0.1 dex 500 streams 50,000 halo giants 2500 deg2 Chemicallabellingof stars by distinct formation events

  7. Cosmological Surveys What is dark energy and (how) does it evolve? 0.1% in growth rate, 0.7% on dH(z) 0.4% on dA(z) • Select galaxies from LOFAR continuum surveys 30,60,120 & 200MHz (0.1mJy) • ~10000 deg2, radio continuum detections (no redshifts) • ~107 targets, z<1.3 (Ha/OII) & z>2.3 (Lya) • Strongly biased towards star forming galaxies… >10M/year at z=0.5, easily detectable with WEAVE • BAO survey with high (>80%) redshift success rate in ~800 nights (c.f. 30% success rate implied for FMOS surveys based on broad-band colour selection) • R=5000: easy to work in the OH forest at 900nm

  8. Galaxy Evolution: WEAVE/APERTIF Connect galaxy evolution to internal and external effects: Couple internal motions and stellar content to neutral gas and large-scale environment APERTIF:set of phased array detectors at the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope... Northern Hemisphere SKA pathfinder. APERTIF Medium Deep Survey 500 square degrees, 104 galaxies z<0.4 with full HI velocity maps Correlate HI velocity maps with stellar populations and star formation using WEAVE IFUs Nearby targets observed with a single large IFU HETDEX H-ATLAS CVn groups Nearby Galaxy

  9. Current Layout of the WHT Current top-end flip-ring GHRIL enclosure, WYFFOS spectrograph GRACE enclosure, NAOMI/OASIS

  10. Top level specs

  11. Instrument Overview…

  12. New Prime Focus Corrector • 2 degree diameter field of view (f/2.7) • 1000mm first lens • 270mm back focal distance • Counter-rotating ADC • Polychromatic image quality degrades by only 0.1” at 55 degrees ZD with ADC. • Flat focal plane with tolerable (<2.5° non-telecentricity N-BK7, N-BK7/LLF1, N-BK7/LLF1, N-FK5 Poster 8444-251 (T. Agocs, Tuesday)

  13. Prime Focus Corrector & ADC Initial mounting concept integrates PFC directly to the ring to save mass Presents a challenge for alignment and stability..

  14. Prime Focus Corrector & ADC Better option is to mount the corrector within the centre-section

  15. Fits inside the available vertical space envelope… (just clears the crane gantry) Positioner Total positioner mass ~800kg (including anti-vibration Counterweights) Obstruction diameter ~1.6m Tumbler clears corrector by ~10mm Positioner 1 Positioner 2 Sky Camera Fibre wrap

  16. Positioner Positioner represents a large off-axis load on the inner ring, but mass/balance managed to be close to current values.

  17. Retractor Concept Push park locations beyond the useful field edge to ease accomodation of 1000 fibres. Triple-parking concept. –Optimal choice to allow sufficient structure for discrete units

  18. FIELD SIMULATION Random target distribution, oversampled (1800 targets) Reconfiguration simulations imply ~1750 moves to reconfigure…, but some optimisation still to be done… Conservative 2-robot simulation suggests a gain of >80% 8 Guide ‘fibres’/field are coherent image bundles (FOV ~4”). Demand position must be tracked during the exposure to follow differential refraction

  19. Button Input Geometry 85μm 1.3” =75μm

  20. Poster 8450-127 (I. Guinouard, Tuesday) WEAVE IFUs • Use the full available slit length of the spectrograph. • 20-30 small field IFUs, same fibre size as MOS • 50-30 fibres/unit, e.g. • Large single-field IFU uses full slit length in a single IFU located at 90° tumbler position IFUs stored on one MOS field plate, at the cost of a small number of MOS science fibres. Physical size of IFU unit still governed by 57μm/” plate scale, so still only a few mm button size. 12.4” 14.7” 1.3” 1.5” 7.8” 9”

  21. WEAVE IFUs • Use the full available slit length of the spectrograph. • Large single-field IFU uses full slit length in a single IFU located at 90° tumbler position • ~550 2.6” fibres in a SPARSE-PAK geometry • Offset bundles for skysubtraction • Fixed dedicated autoguider unit

  22. f/3.0 input, f/1.8 camera, 190mm beam diameter. 2x8kx3k e2V CCDs (CCD231-68) in each camera. Dual-Beam Spectrograph Design Slit curved to give uniform spectral coverage for all fibres in low-res 7-lens cameras (3 aspheres) 16k spectral pixels, R=5000 over 370—1000nm in one shot Camera lenses are F2, LLF1, N-FK51A, and LAK9 Some vignetting allowed in high res

  23. f/3.0 input, f/1.8 camera, 190mm beam diameter. 2x8kx3k e2V CCDs (CCD231-68) in each camera. Dual-Beam Spectrograph Design Slit curved to give uniform spectral coverage for all fibres in low-res 7-lens cameras (3 aspheres) 16k spectral pixels, R=5000 over 370—1000nm in one shot Camera lenses are F2, LLF1, N-FK51A, and LAK9 Some vignetting allowed in high res Slits exchanged vertically

  24. Throughput

  25. High-res Low-res WEAVE as a survey instrument

  26. WEAVE TIMELINE • Forward look for WHT now determined • WEAVE is the centrepiece through to 2022 • PDR Feb 2013 • Goal is to complete construction and be on-sky for science in early 2017. • 5 years of operations 1.3x107 high quality spectra (data pipeline based on CASU development for ESO-Gaia VLT FLAMES survey)

More Related