We discuss the field retermination of high-fiber count MTP fiber connectors used with the APOGEE spectrograph at Apache Point Observatory (APO) in 2021. We address lessons-learned, wear-analysis of removed MTPs, and throughput of the fiber train with the newly terminated fibers in SDSS-V. For the past decade the spectrograph at APO, as part of multiple incarnations of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), has relied upon rapid changes of ten MTP connectors, each containing 30 terminated fibers, and all contained within a custom gang connector system. These rapid changes enable the iterative plugging of the gang connector into multiple cartridges with different plug plates to observe various survey fields throughout the night. While robotic Focal Plane Systems have been developed for SDSS-V to replace plug plates, which will minimize the fiber connector cycles, we nonetheless reterminated the most heavily used MTP connectors. The connector cycles had far exceeded manufacturer lifetimes and the overall system throughput was degrading.
We present the on-sky performance of the new wide field corrector for the fifth generation of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-V). This new three-element corrector was designed to replace the previous two-element design, which had an aspherical focal surface and was not optimized for the infrared (H-band). The purpose of the new corrector is to improve the imaging performance required for a new robotic Fiber Positioning System (FPS). For commissioning, a Focal Surface Camera (FSC) was developed and used to determine the focal surface location relative to the telescope interface, and to verify imaging performance across the 3-degree field of view of the corrector. This paper discusses the commissioning process in detail, describes how the imaging data were processed, and presents the measured image quality across the field.
We describe the on-sky performance of the robotic Focal Plane System (FPS) units that replace the fiber plug-plate systems at the Sloan and duPont telescopes for the SDSS-V survey. The first FPS was arrived at Apache Point in December 2021, and the second unit will be delivered to Las Campanas in spring 2022. Each FPS carries 500 zonal fiber positioners carrying three fibers: two science fibers for the BOSS and APOGEE spectrographs and a back-illuminated metrology fiber. The FPS enables the SDSS-V Milky Way and Black Hole Mapper surveys that will begin survey operations in 2022.
John Wilson, F. Hearty, M. Skrutskie, S. Majewski, R. Schiavon, D. Eisenstein, J. Gunn, J. Holtzman, D. Nidever, B. Gillespie, D. Weinberg, B. Blank, C. Henderson, S. Smee, R. Barkhouser, A. Harding, S. Hope, G. Fitzgerald, T. Stolberg, J. Arns, M. Nelson, S. Brunner, A. Burton, E. Walker, C. Lam, P. Maseman, J. Barr, F. Leger, L. Carey, N. MacDonald, G. Ebelke, S. Beland, T. Horne, E. Young, G. Rieke, M. Rieke, T. O'Brien, J. Crane, M. Carr, C. Harrison, R. Stoll, M. Vernieri, M. Shetrone, C. Allende-Prieto, J. Johnson, P. Frinchaboy, G. Zasowski, A. Garcia Perez, D. Bizyaev, K. Cunha, V. Smith, Sz. Meszaros, B. Zhao, M. Hayden, S. D. Chojnowski, B. Andrews, C. Loomis, R. Owen, M. Klaene, J. Brinkmann, F. Stauffer, D. Long, W. Jordan, D. Holder, F. Cope, T. Naugle, B. Pfaffenberger, D. Schlegel, M. Blanton, D. Muna, B. Weaver, S. Snedden, K. Pan, H. Brewington, E. Malanushenko, V. Malanushenko, A. Simmons, D. Oravetz, S. Mahadevan, S. Halverson
The Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) uses a dedicated 300-fiber, narrow-band
near-infrared (1.51-1.7 μm), high resolution (R~22,500) spectrograph to survey approximately 100,000 giant stars across
the Milky Way. This three-year survey, in operation since late-summer 2011 as part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III
(SDSS III), will revolutionize our understanding of the kinematical and chemical enrichment histories of all Galactic
stellar populations. We present the performance of the instrument from its first year in operation. The instrument is
housed in a separate building adjacent to the 2.5-m SDSS telescope and fed light via approximately 45-meter fiber runs
from the telescope. The instrument design includes numerous innovations including a gang connector that allows
simultaneous connection of all fibers with a single plug to a telescope cartridge that positions the fibers on the sky,
numerous places in the fiber train in which focal ratio degradation had to be minimized, a large mosaic-VPH (290 mm x
475 mm elliptically-shaped recorded area), an f/1.4 six-element refractive camera featuring silicon and fused silica
elements with diameters as large as 393 mm, three near-infrared detectors mounted in a 1 x 3 mosaic with sub-pixel
translation capability, and all of these components housed within a custom, LN2-cooled, stainless steel vacuum cryostat
with dimensions 1.4-m x 2.3-m x 1.3-m.
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