The ELT-MOS (MOSAIC) towards the construction phase

Authors
  • S. Morris
  • F. Hammer
  • P. Jagourel
  • C.J. Evans
  • M. Puech
  • G.B. Dalton
  • M. Rodrigues
  • R. Sanchez-Janssen
  • E. Fitzsimons
  • B. Barbuy
  • J.-G. Cuby
  • L. Kaper
  • M. Roth
  • G. Rousset
  • R. Myers
  • O. Le Fèvre
  • A. Finogenov
  • J. Kotilainen
  • B. Castilho
  • G. Ostlin
  • S. Feltzing
  • A. Korn
  • J. Gallego
  • Á. Castillo Morales
  • J. Iglesias-Páramo
  • L. Pentericci
  • B. Ziegler
  • J. Afonso
  • M. Dubbledam
  • M. Close
  • P. Parr-Burman
  • T.J. Morris
  • F. Chemla
  • F. De Frondat
  • A. Kelz
  • I. Guinouard
  • I.J. Lewis
  • K. Middleton
  • R. Navarro
  • M. Larrieu
  • J. Pragt
  • A. Janssen
  • K. Dohlen
  • K. El Hadi
  • É. Gendron
  • Y. Yang
  • M. Wells
  • J.-M. Conan
  • T. Fusco
  • D. Schaerer
  • E. Bergin
  • S. Taburet
  • M. Frotin
  • N. Berkourn
Publication date 2018
Host editors
  • C.J. Evans
  • L. Simard
  • H. Takami
Book title Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII
Book subtitle 10-14 June 2018, Austin, Texas, United States
ISBN
  • 9781510619579
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9781510619586
Series Proceedings of the SPIE
Event Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VII
Article number 107021W
Volume | Issue number 1
Number of pages 6
Publisher Bellingham, WA: SPIE
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
When combined with the huge collecting area of the ELT, MOSAIC will be the most effective and flexible Multi-Object Spectrograph (MOS) facility in the world, having both a high multiplex and a multi-Integral Field Unit (Multi-IFU) capability. It will be the fastest way to spectroscopically follow-up the faintest sources, probing the reionisation epoch, as well as evaluating the evolution of the dwarf mass function over most of the age of the Universe. MOSAIC will be world-leading in generating an inventory of both the dark matter (from realistic rotation curves with MOAO fed NIR IFUs) and the cool to warm-hot gas phases in z=3.5 galactic haloes (with visible wavelenth IFUs). Galactic archaeology and the first massive black holes are additional targets for which MOSAIC will also be revolutionary. MOAO and accurate sky subtraction with fibres have now been demonstrated on sky, removing all low Technical Readiness Level (TRL) items from the instrument. A prompt implementation of MOSAIC is feasible, and indeed could increase the robustness and reduce risk on the ELT, since it does not require diffraction limited adaptive optics performance. Science programmes and survey strategies are currently being investigated by the Consortium, which is also hoping to welcome a few new partners in the next two years.
Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2311430
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2018SPIE10702E..1WM
Permalink to this page
Back