The Development of WIFIS: a Wide Integral Field Infrared Spectrograph
Suresh Sivanandam, Richard C. Y. Chou, Dae-Sik Moon, Ke Ma, Maxwell, Millar-Blanchaer, Stephen S. Eikenberry, Moo-Young Chun, Sang Chul Kim,, Steven N. Raines, Joshua Eisner

TL;DR
WIFIS is a newly developed wide-field infrared spectrograph offering high sensitivity and large field-of-view for integral field observations in the 0.9-1.8 um range, enabling advanced astronomical studies.
Contribution
This paper introduces the design, development, and laboratory characterization of WIFIS, a versatile, wide-field infrared spectrograph with unprecedented capabilities for seeing-limited observations.
Findings
Optical design achieves wide field-of-view up to 20" x 50".
Laboratory tests confirmed IFU properties such as magnification and slit width.
Predicted on-sky performance evaluated for two major telescopes.
Abstract
We present the current results from the development of a wide integral field infrared spectrograph (WIFIS). WIFIS offers an unprecedented combination of etendue and spectral resolving power for seeing-limited, integral field observations in the 0.9-1.8 um range and is most sensitive in the 0.9-1.35 um range. Its optical design consists of front-end re-imaging optics, an all-reflective image slicer-type, integral field unit (IFU) called FISICA, and a long-slit grating spectrograph back-end that is coupled with a HAWAII 2RG focal plane array. The full wavelength range is achieved by selecting between two different gratings. By virtue of its re-imaging optics, the spectrograph is quite versatile and can be used at multiple telescopes. The size of its field-of-view is unrivalled by other similar spectrographs, offering a 4.5" x 12" integral field at a 10-meter class telescope (or 20" x 50"…
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