Suppression of the near-infrared OH night sky lines with fibre Bragg gratings - first results
S. C. Ellis, J. Bland-Hawthorn, J. Lawrence, A. J. Horton, C. Trinh,, S. G. Leon-Saval, K. Shortridge, J. Bryant, S. Case, M. Colless, W. Couch, K., Freeman, L. Gers, K. Glazebrook, R. Haynes, S. Lee, H.-G. Loehmannsroeben, J., O.Byrne, S. Miziarski, M. Roth, B. Schmidt

TL;DR
This paper reports on the first results of GNOSIS, a new instrument that uses fibre Bragg gratings to suppress atmospheric OH emission lines in the near-infrared, significantly reducing background noise for ground-based astronomy.
Contribution
The paper introduces GNOSIS, demonstrating effective suppression of OH lines with fibre Bragg gratings and analyzing the residual background, advancing low resolution infrared spectroscopy technology.
Findings
OH lines suppressed by a factor of ~1000
Background reduced by a factor of 9 between 1.5-1.7 microns
Detection of an unidentified residual interline component
Abstract
The background noise between 1 and 1.8 microns in ground-based instruments is dominated by atmospheric emission from hydroxyl molecules. We have built and commissioned a new instrument, GNOSIS, which suppresses 103 OH doublets between 1.47 - 1.7 microns by a factor of ~1000 with a resolving power of ~10,000. We present the first results from the commissioning of GNOSIS using the IRIS2 spectrograph at the AAT. The combined throughput of the GNOSIS fore-optics, grating unit and relay optics is ~36 per cent, but this could be improved to ~46 per cent with a more optimal design. We measure strong suppression of the OH lines, confirming that OH suppression with fibre Bragg gratings will be a powerful technology for low resolution spectroscopy. The integrated OH suppressed background between 1.5 and 1.7 microns is reduced by a factor of 9 compared to a control spectrum using the same system…
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