The optical design of the Southern African Large Telescope high resolution spectrograph: SALT HRS
2008
SALT HRS is a fiber-fed cross-dispersed echelle spectrograph designed for high resolution and high efficiency seeing-limited
spectroscopy on the Southern African Large Telescope. The spectrograph, which has a dual channel white
pupil design, uses a single R4 echelle grating, a dichroic beam-splitter, and volume phase holographic gratings
as cross-dispersers. The echelle grating has 41.6 grooves/mm and is illuminated with a 200mm diameter beam.
This allows R = 16,000 with a 2.2" fiber and complete wavelength coverage from 370 nm to 890 nm. Resolving
powers of R ≈ 37,000 and 67,000 are obtained using image slicers. The dichroic beam-splitter is used to split the
wavelength coverage between two fully dioptric cameras. The white pupil transfer optics are used to demagnify
the pupil to 111mm which ensures that the camera dimensions are kept reasonable whilst also allowing the
efficient use of VPH gratings. The spectrograph optics are enclosed inside a vacuum tank to ensure immunity to
atmospheric pressure and temperature changes. The entire spectrograph is mechanically and thermally insulated.
Construction of SALT HRS began at Durham University's Centre for Advanced Instrumentation in August 2007
and is expected to be complete in 2009. The spectrograph optical design is largely based on work completed at
the University of Canterbury's Department of Physics and Astronomy.
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