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This paper summarizes the optical, mechanical, electrical, and software design of LRIS-B, the blue channel of the Keck Low Resolution and Imaging Spectrograph. The LRIS-B project will shortly be completing the existing LRIS instrument through the addition of dichroic beamsplitters, grisms to disperse light on the blue channel, broad-band u, B, and V photometric filters, a blue and near-UV transmitting camera lens, and a large format blue-sensitive CCD detector. LRIS-B will also introduce piezoelectric xy-actuation of the CCD detector inside its Dewar, in order to compensate for flexure in the existing instrument; ultimately the red-side CCD detector will be similarly equipped, its PZT xy-stage being independently programmed. The optical design of the LRIS-B camera uses only fused silica and calcium fluoride elements, and includes a decentered meniscus element to compensate for coma introduced by the LRIS off-axis paraboloid collimator. The design of the blue channel grisms have been optimized for maximum blaze efficiency, the highest dispersion grism having a groove density of 1200 gr/mm. Optical elements not in use at any given time will be stowed in carousels externally mounted to the instrument sidewalls. The entire instrument is designed to permit remote operation.
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James K. McCarthy
Manaaki Whenua – Landcare Research
Judith G. Cohen
California Institute of Technology
Brad W. Butcher
University of Pittsburgh
Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering/Proceedings of SPIE
California Institute of Technology
Optical Sciences (United States)
Palomar College
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McCarthy et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0fe81692676d5461fd3bab — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1117/12.316831