Hector - a new massively multiplexed IFS instrument for the Anglo-Australian Telescope
Julia J. Bryant, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Jon Lawrence, Scott Croom, David, Brown, Sudharshan Venkatesan, Peter R. Gillingham, Ross Zhelem, Robert, Content, Will Saunders, Nicholas F. Staszak, Jesse van de Sande, Warrick, Couch, Sergio Leon-Saval, Julia Tims, Richard McDermid

TL;DR
Hector is a new massively multiplexed integral field spectroscopy instrument for the AAT, designed to significantly enhance galaxy surveys with wider field, higher resolution, and efficient positioning, enabling new galaxy evolution studies.
Contribution
It introduces an innovative hexabundle design and starbug positioning system, enabling large-scale, high-resolution galaxy surveys with improved efficiency and broader scientific capabilities.
Findings
Designed to image 90% of galaxies out to 2 effective radii
Will conduct a 100,000 galaxy IFS survey
Enables measurement of lower velocity dispersions in galaxies
Abstract
Hector will be the new massively-multiplexed integral field spectroscopy (IFS) instrument for the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT) in Australia and the next main dark-time instrument for the observatory. Based on the success of the SAMI instrument, which is undertaking a 3400-galaxy survey, the integral field unit (IFU) imaging fibre bundle (hexabundle) technology under-pinning SAMI is being improved to a new innovative design for Hector. The distribution of hexabundle angular sizes is matched to the galaxy survey properties in order to image 90% of galaxies out to 2 effective radii. 50-100 of these IFU imaging bundles will be positioned by 'starbug' robots across a new 3-degree field corrector top end to be purpose-built for the AAT. Many thousand fibres will then be fed into new replicable spectrographs. Fundamentally new science will be achieved compared to existing instruments due…
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