HARMONI: the first light integral field spectrograph for the E-ELT

Thatte, N. A.; Clarke, Fraser; Bryson, Ian; Schnetler, Hermine; Tecza, Matthias; Bacon, Roland M.; Remillieux, Alban; Mediavilla, E.; Herreros Linares, J. M.; Arribas, Santiago; Evans, Christopher J.; Lunney, David W.; Fusco, Thierry; O'Brien, Kieran; Tosh, Ian A.; Ives, Derek J.; Finger, Gert; Houghton, Ryan; Davies, Roger L.; Lynn, James D.; Allen, Jamie R.; Zieleniewski, Simon D.; Kendrew, Sarah; Ferraro-Wood, Vanessa; Pécontal-Rousset, Arlette; Kosmalski, Johan; Richard, Johan; Jarno, Aurelien; Gallie, Angus M.; Montgomery, David M.; Henry, David; Zins, Gérard; Freeman, David; García-Lorenzo, B.; Rodríguez-Ramos, L. F.; Revuelta, J. S. C.; Hernandez Suarez, E.; Bueno-Bueno, A.; Gigante-Ripoll, J. V.; Garcia, Adolfo; Dohlen, Kjetil; Neichel, Benoît.
Bibliographical reference

Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 9147, id. 914725 11 pp. (2014).

Advertised on:
8
2014
Number of authors
42
IAC number of authors
8
Citations
16
Refereed citations
15
Description
HARMONI is a visible and near-infrared (0.47 to 2.45 μm) integral field spectrometer, providing the E-ELT's core spectroscopic capability, over a range of resolving powers from R (≡λ/Δλ)~500 to R~20000. The instrument provides simultaneous spectra of ~32000 spaxels at visible and near-IR wavelengths, arranged in a √2:1 aspect ratio contiguous field. HARMONI is conceived as a workhorse instrument, addressing many of the E-ELT's key science cases, and will exploit the E-ELT's scientific potential in its early years, starting at first light. HARMONI provides a range of spatial pixel (spaxel) scales and spectral resolving powers, which permit the user to optimally configure the instrument for a wide range of science programs; from ultra-sensitive to diffraction limited, spatially resolved, physical (via morphology), chemical (via abundances and line ratios) and kinematic (via line-of-sight velocities) studies of astrophysical sources. Recently, the HARMONI design has undergone substantial changes due to significant modifications to the interface with the telescope and the architecture of the E-ELT Nasmyth platform. We present an overview of the capabilities of HARMONI, and of its design from a functional and performance viewpoint.