GeminiFocus January 2014 | Page 27

The primary accomplishment of 2013 was the successful production of a complete 200-meter-long test fiber that met all the project requirements. The fiber is GRACES’s most critical component. As the article goes to press, the vendor (FiberTech) has completed one of the two needed full-length science fibers with initial testing that appears promising. The final 270-meter-long optical fiber cable, with its two individual shielded fibers, is expected to be completed and sent to NRC-Herzberg (formerly the Herzberg Institute for Astrophysics) in January, 2014. In order to compete with other similar 8- to 10-meter class instruments, the fiber must achieve its specified high performance in term of its focal-ratio degradation (FRD), internal transmission, and spectral range coverage. The successful 200-meter test fiber was a milestone event toward achieving the required FRD within the 270-meter-long science cable of ~10 percent (required) to ~20 percent (goal); the test cable was fabricated, polished, shielded, and had connectors attached before it was tested and delivered in July. All of the optics (e.g., lenses and slicer) and commercial hardware (e.g., translation stages, adjusters, and mounts) have been received, and the custom hardware parts have been fabricated, many of them in the machine shop at NRC-Herzberg. The injector unit uses a Gemini North MultiObject Spectrograph (GMOS-N) filter cassette, which allows GMOS-N to act as an acquisition camera for GRACES. Permanently installed in ESPaDOnS, the slicer (see Figure 6) includes a deployable fold mirror that allows ESPaDOnS to be used with the CFHT or GRACES by simply moving the fold mirror in and out of the optical path of ESPaDOnS. Critically, this swap can be done without affecting the alignment or performance of either instrument. January2014 Looking Ahead to 2014 Figure 6. Our plans for 2014 are to see a completely revitalized instrument suite at Gemini South with GeMS/GSAOI, GPI, and FLAMINGOS-2 in regular operations and new state-of-the-artdetectors in GMOS-S. We expect to complete the preliminary design stage of GHOS and launch a request for proposals for the nextgeneration, new Gemini instrument in 2014. We plan to be testing GRACES during the second quarter of 2014 and, if successful, will work to offer high-resolution optical spectroscopy to our community with this instrument. In the lab, we will start assembly of a new focal plane array for GMOS-N, to be installed in early 2015. The slicer bench, which will be installed inside ESPaDOnS, will receive light from the fiber and send it to the image slicer (not yet installed on the bench). The sliced image is then directed to the ESPaDOnS spectrograph. Scot Kleinman is Head of the Instrumentation Program at Gemini. He can be reached at: [email protected] GeminiFocus 25