GeminiFocus 2017 Year in Review | Page 59

perature of 80 Kelvin (K). Because F-2 is sen- sitive to part of the thermal region of the NIR (up to 2.5 microns), the masks and the instrument’s front section are inside a fron- tal cryogenic dewar. In order to exchange the MOS masks, the frontal dewar has to be thermally cycled between the ambient temperature and atmospheric pressure, and then back down to 100 K and high vac- uum. The next step is to test the engineer- ing procedures and install a batch of masks for science commissioning, planned for the week of March 27th. The next step is to test the engineering procedures and install a batch of masks for science commissioning, planned for the last week of April. Update on K-band Filters for F-2 (K2F2) In Semester 2017B, Gemini will offer in shared risk mode two medium-band filters for splitting the K-band (1.9–2.5 microns): a K-red filter (2.19–2.44 microns) and a K-blue filter (1.94–2.17 microns). We have received the filters from Texas A&M University as part of the K2F2 project — a Small Project for Instrument Upgrades awarded funds in 2016 (Figures 18 and 19). The filters will be installed during a scheduled instrument shutdown spanning April 6–18. On-sky ac- ceptance tests will follow, with science com- missioning slated for May. — Rubén Díaz Figure 18 (left). The K-red filter on the left and the K-blue filter on the right. Images were obtained during the filters’ physical inspection. Figure 19 (right). Reflections of Gemini South Science Fellows Karleyne Silva and Veronica Firpo, left and right, respectively. January 2018 / 2017 Year in Review GeminiFocus 57