Progress with the Prime Focus Spectrograph for the Subaru Telescope: a massively multiplexed optical and near-infrared fiber spectrograph
Hajime Sugai, Naoyuki Tamura, Hiroshi Karoji, Atsushi Shimono,, Naruhisa Takato, Masahiko Kimura, Youichi Ohyama, Akitoshi Ueda, Hrand, Aghazarian, Marcio Vital de Arruda, Robert H. Barkhouser, Charles L. Bennett,, Steve Bickerton, Alexandre Bozier, David F. Braun, Khanh Bui

TL;DR
The Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) for the Subaru Telescope is a highly multiplexed optical/near-infrared fiber spectrograph with 2394 fibers, enabling wide-field, multi-program astronomical surveys with advanced fiber positioning and spectroscopic capabilities.
Contribution
This paper details the design, development, and testing of the PFS instrument, including fiber positioning, spectrograph modules, and CCDs, representing a significant advancement in multi-object spectroscopy for large telescopes.
Findings
Prototype fiber positioners tested successfully.
CCD production for blue and red arms completed.
Optical components like gratings and spectrograph modules have been validated.
Abstract
The Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) is an optical/near-infrared multi-fiber spectrograph with 2394 science fibers, which are distributed in 1.3 degree diameter field of view at Subaru 8.2-meter telescope. The simultaneous wide wavelength coverage from 0.38 um to 1.26 um, with the resolving power of 3000, strengthens its ability to target three main survey programs: cosmology, Galactic archaeology, and galaxy/AGN evolution. A medium resolution mode with resolving power of 5000 for 0.71 um to 0.89 um also will be available by simply exchanging dispersers. PFS takes the role for the spectroscopic part of the Subaru Measurement of Images and Redshifts project, while Hyper Suprime-Cam works on the imaging part. To transform the telescope plus WFC focal ratio, a 3-mm thick broad-band coated glass-molded microlens is glued to each fiber tip. A higher transmission fiber is selected for the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers
