Bibcode
DOI
Montilla, I.; Pécontal, E.; Devriendt, J.; Bacon, R.
Referencia bibliográfica
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Volume 120, issue 868, pp.634-643
Fecha de publicación:
5
2008
Número de citas
2
Número de citas referidas
2
Descripción
We have carried out a concept study for a wide-field monolithic integral
field unit (IFU) spectrograph for extremely large telescopes (ELTs). We
target in this paper the technological challenges that have to be faced
in order to build such an instrument, focusing on the adaptive optics
(AO) requirements, the image slicer technology, and the detectors
status. We also address the main science drivers, together with the
concept design and the expected performance applied to the European-ELT
(E-ELT) case. A monolithic wide-field spectrograph provides a continuous
field of view (FOV) separated by a field splitter in several subfields,
each of them feeding a module featuring an image slicer, a collimator
and a spectrograph. The use of image slicers provides 3D spectrographic
images of the complete FOV, allowing for detection and study of sources
without need of targeting them, a very useful property especially for
the deep observation of faint high-redshift objects, whose density on
the sky is expected to be quite high. In light of this discussion, we
suggest the advantages of using shorter wavelengths and its implication
in both the scientific program and the budget.