Project overview and update on WEAVE: the next generation wide-field spectroscopy facility for the William Herschel Telescope
/ Authors
G. Dalton, S. Trager, D. Abrams, P. Bonifacio, J. A. Lopez Aguerri, K. Middleton, C. Benn, K. Dee, F. Sayede, I. Lewis
and 43 more authors
J. Pragt, Sergio Picó, N. Walton, J. Rey, C. Allende Prieto, J. Peñate, É. Lhomé, T. Agócs, J. Alonso, D. Terrett, M. Brock, J. Gilbert, A. Ridings, I. Guinouard, M. Verheijen, I. Tosh, K. Rogers, I. Steele, R. Stuik, N. Tromp, A. Jaskó, J. Kragt, D. Lesman, C. Mottram, S. Bates, F. Gribbin, L. Rodríguez, J. Delgado, Carlos Martín, D. Cano, R. Navarro, M. Irwin, J. Lewis, E. González Solares, N. O'Mahony, A. Bianco, C. Zurita, R. ter Horst, E. Molinari, M. Lodi, J. Guerra, A. Vallenari, A. Baruffolo
/ Abstract
We present an overview of and status report on the WEAVE next-generation spectroscopy facility for the William Herschel Telescope (WHT). WEAVE principally targets optical ground-based follow up of upcoming ground-based (LOFAR) and space-based (Gaia) surveys. WEAVE is a multi-object and multi-IFU facility utilizing a new 2-degree prime focus field of view at the WHT, with a buffered pick-and-place positioner system hosting 1000 multi-object (MOS) fibres, 20 integral field units, or a single large IFU for each observation. The fibres are fed to a single spectrograph, with a pair of 8k(spectral) x 6k (spatial) pixel cameras, located within the WHT GHRIL enclosure on the telescope Nasmyth platform, supporting observations at R~5000 over the full 370-1000nm wavelength range in a single exposure, or a high resolution mode with limited coverage in each arm at R~20000. The project is now in the final design and early procurement phase, with commissioning at the telescope expected in 2017.
Journal: Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation
DOI: 10.1117/12.2055132