The HETDEX Instrumentation: Hobby-Eberly Telescope Wide Field Upgrade and VIRUS
Gary J. Hill, Hanshin Lee, Phillip J. MacQueen, Andreas Kelz, Niv, Drory, Brian L. Vattiat, John M. Good, Jason Ramsey, Herman Kriel, Trent, Peterson, D. L. DePoy, Karl Gebhardt, J. L. Marshall, Sarah E. Tuttle, Svend, M. Bauer, Taylor S. Chonis, Maximilian H. Fabricius

TL;DR
The paper details the upgrade of the Hobby-Eberly Telescope with a wide-field instrument and VIRUS spectrograph, enabling large-scale spectroscopic surveys to study dark energy through galaxy redshift measurements.
Contribution
It introduces the HET wide-field upgrade and VIRUS instrument, showcasing innovative replication technology for large-scale optical spectroscopic surveys.
Findings
Successful completion of the multi-year upgrade in 2016.
VIRUS's capability to conduct large-area sky surveys efficiently.
Enhanced telescope performance for cosmological research.
Abstract
The Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET) Dark Energy Experiment (HETDEX) is undertaking a blind wide-field low-resolution spectroscopic survey of 540 square degrees of sky to identify and derive redshifts for a million Lyman-alpha emitting galaxies (LAEs) in the redshift range 1.9 < z < 3.5. The ultimate goal is to measure the expansion rate of the Universe at this epoch, to sharply constrain cosmological parameters and thus the nature of dark energy. A major multi-year wide field upgrade (WFU) of the HET was completed in 2016 that substantially increased the field of view to 22 arcminutes diameter and the pupil to 10 meters, by replacing the optical corrector, tracker, and prime focus instrument package and by developing a new telescope control system. The new, wide-field HET now feeds the Visible Integral-field Replicable Unit Spectrograph (VIRUS), a new low-resolution integral field…
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