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The GMT-Consortium Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF): an optical Echelle spectrograph for the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT)Szentgyorgyi, Andrew, Baldwin, Daniel, Barnes, Stuart, Bean, Jacob, Ben-Ami, Sagi, Brennan, Patricia, Budynkiewicz, Jamie, Chun, Moo-Young, Conroy, Charlie, Crane, Jeffrey D., Epps, Harland, Evans, Ian, Evans, Janet, Foster, Jeff, Frebel, Anna, Gauron, Thomas, Guzmán, Dani, Hare, Tyson, Jang, Bi-Ho, Jang, Jeong-Gyun, Jordan, Andres, Kim, Jihun, Kim, Kang-Miin, Mendes de Oliveira, Claudia Mendes, Lopez-Morales, Mercedes, McCracken, Kenneth, McMuldroch, Stuart, Miller, Joseph, Mueller, Mark, Oh, Jae Sok, Onyuksel, Cem, Ordway, Mark, Park, Byeong-Gon, Park, Chan, Park, Sung-Joon, Paxson, Charles, Phillips, David, Plummer, David, Podgorski, William, Seifahrt, Andreas, Stark, Daniel, Steiner, Joao, Uomoto, Alan, Walsworth, Ronald, Yu, Young-Sam 09 August 2016 (has links)
The GMT-Consortium Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF) will be a cross-dispersed, optical band echelle spectrograph to be delivered as the first light scientific instrument for the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT) in 2022. G-CLEF is vacuumenclosed and fiber-fed to enable precision radial velocity (PRV) measurements, especially for the detection and characterization of low-mass exoplanets orbiting solar-type stars. The passband of G-CLEF is broad, extending from 3500 angstrom to . This passband provides good sensitivity at blue wavelengths for stellar abundance studies and deep red response for observations of high-redshift phenomena. The design of G-CLEF incorporates several novel technical innovations. We give an overview of the innovative features of the current design. G-CLEF will be the first PRV spectrograph to have a composite optical bench so as to exploit that material's extremely low coefficient of thermal expansion, high in-plane thermal conductivity and high stiffness-to-mass ratio. The spectrograph camera subsystem is divided into a red and a blue channel, split by a dichroic, so there are two independent refractive spectrograph cameras. The control system software is being developed in model-driven software context that has been adopted globally by the GMT. G-CLEF has been conceived and designed within a strict systems engineering framework. As a part of this process, we have developed a analytical toolset to assess the predicted performance of G-CLEF as it has evolved through design phases.
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Advanced structural design for precision radial velocity instrumentsBaldwin, Dan, Szentgyorgyi, Andrew, Barnes, Stuart, Bean, Jacob, Ben-Ami, Sagi, Brennan, Patricia, Budynkiewicz, Jamie, Chun, Moo-Young, Conroy, Charlie, Crane, Jeffrey D., Epps, Harland, Evans, Ian, Evans, Janet, Foster, Jeff, Frebel, Anna, Gauron, Thomas, Guzman, Dani, Hare, Tyson, Jang, Bi-Ho, Jang, Jeong-Gyun, Jordan, Andres, Kim, Jihun, Kim, Kang-Min, Mendes de Oliveira, Claudia, Lopez-Morales, Mercedes, McCracken, Kenneth, McMuldroch, Stuart, Miller, Joseph, Mueller, Mark, Oh, Jae Sok, Ordway, Mark, Park, Byeong-Gon, Park, Chan, Park, Sung-Joon, Paxson, Charles, Phillips, David, Plummer, David, Podgorski, William, Seifahrt, Andreas, Stark, Daniel, Steiner, Joao, Uomoto, Alan, Walsworth, Ronald, Yu, Young-Sam 22 July 2016 (has links)
The GMT-Consortium Large Earth Finder (G-CLEF) is an echelle spectrograph with precision radial velocity (PRV) capability that will be a first light instrument for the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT). G-CLEF has a PRV precision goal of 40 cm/sec (10 cm/s for multiple measurements) to enable detection of Earth-like exoplanets in the habitable zones of sun-like stars'. This precision is a primary driver of G-CLEF's structural design. Extreme stability is necessary to minimize image motions at the CCD detectors. Minute changes in temperature, pressure, and acceleration environments cause structural deformations, inducing image motions which degrade PRV precision. The instrument's structural design will ensure that the PRV goal is achieved under the environments G-CLEF will be subjected to as installed on the GMT azimuth platform, including: Millikelvin (0.001 K) thermal soaks and gradients 10 millibar changes in ambient pressure Changes in acceleration due to instrument tip/tilt and telescope slewing Carbon fiber/cyanate composite was selected for the optical bench structure in order to meet performance goals. Low coefficient of thermal expansion (C 1E) and high stiffness-to-weight are key features of the composite optical bench design. Manufacturability and serviceability of the instrument are also drivers of the design. In this paper, we discuss analyses leading to technical choices made to minimize G-CLEF's sensitivity to changing environments. Finite element analysis (FEA) and image motion sensitivity studies were conducted to determine PRV performance under operational environments. We discuss the design of the optical bench structure to optimize stiffness to -weight and minimize deformations due to inertial and pressure effects. We also discuss quasi-kinematic mounting of optical elements and assemblies, and optimization of these to ensure minimal image motion under thermal, pressure, and inertial loads expected during PRV observations.
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