The Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer: Thousands of Fibers, Infinite Possibilities
Andrew Sheinis, Samuel C. Barden, Jennifer Sobeck, The MSE Team

TL;DR
The Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE) is a next-generation, massively multiplexed spectroscopic telescope designed to observe thousands of targets simultaneously across a broad wavelength range, enabling groundbreaking research in astrophysics.
Contribution
This paper introduces the design and scientific goals of MSE, a revolutionary telescope with unprecedented multiplexing and spectral capabilities for diverse astrophysical studies.
Findings
MSE will observe 18,000-20,000 targets per pointing.
It covers a broad wavelength range from 0.36 to 1.80 microns.
It will impact multiple fields, including galaxy evolution and cosmology.
Abstract
The Maunakea Spectroscopic Explorer (MSE) is a massively multiplexed spectroscopic survey facility that will replace the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope over the next two decades. This 12.5-meter telescope, with its 1.5 square degree field-of-view, will observe 18,000-20,000 astronomical targets in every pointing from 0.36-1.80 microns at low/moderate resolution (R~3,000, 6,000) and from 0.36-0.90 microns at high resolution (R~30,000). Parallel positioning of all fibers in the field will occur, providing simultaneous full-field coverage for both resolution modes. Unveiling the composition and dynamics of the faint Universe, MSE will impact nearly every field of astrophysics across all spatial scales, from individual stars to the largest scale structures in the Universe, including (i) the ultimate Gaia follow-up facility for understanding the chemistry and dynamics of the distant Milky…
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