GeminiFocus May 2014 | Page 15

As of early April 2014, all the primary GRACES components have successfully passed acceptance tests in the NRC Herzberg labs and will be shipped to Hawai’i for installation later in April. Most significant, the two 280-meterlong fibers each have a higher transmission than expected. Moreover, each fiber introduces a focal ratio degradation (FRD) of order 10 percent, amazingly below the requirement of 20 percent. The project is still in its initial phase, which was envisioned simply as a proof of concept: is it possible to transmit light from one telescope to a spectrograph at another, 280m away? If the integrated and tested GRACES works as well as acceptance tests indicate it will, we will then work with the Gemini and CFHT communities to find ways of entering the next phase: to make this instrument a fully functioning capability at Gemini in the near future. With GRACES high-resolution optical spectroscopy at Gemini North, research into the study of stellar populations, metal-poor stars, binaries, asteroseismology, and more are potentially on the horizon for its users. Back on the Sky — With GPI! At the January 2014 American Astronomical Society (AAS) meeting in Washington, D.C., we released several breathtaking firstlight images from the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI). While the world marveled at the images, a team of dedicated GPI scientists and engineers (led by Leslie Saddlemyer from Canada’s National Research Council; NRC), kept very busy making improvements to the instrument. They meticulously executed a carefully devised remediation plan to resolve some known problems identified prior to delivery. They also strived to improve the baseline performance of the instrument. With the successful completion of this work, on-sky verification and commissioning has recommenced, and the GPI team now anticipates April 2014 an early science run in April with GPI offered for general community use in 2014B. Following last November’s first-light and December’s first verification and commissioning runs, Gemini staff removed GPI from the Instrument Support Structure and transported it to the Gemini South instrumentation lab. There it received several upgrades to address remediation needs such as malfunctioning mechanisms. To facilitate this work (and lead other post-delivery activities), Saddlemyer relocated to Gemini South for a 6-month period, starting in October 2013. The major opto-mechanical work packages involved in this most recent work included the instrument’s Integral Field Spectrograph (IFS). Specifically, the IFS work led by James Larkin (University California Los Angeles), included the following: 1) fixing both the IFS pupil and prism slide mechanisms, to ensure robust performance; 2) installing a baffle, to eliminate a ghost image seen while calibrating the IFS; 3) installing a synchronized controller to the dual Closed Cycle Refrigerators (CCR), to reduce the vibration transmitted to the IFS; and 4) modifying the controller software, to reduce the IFS frame readout time from 7 to 3 seconds. Other work packages included: 1) an upgrade to the control hardware for the microelectro-mechanical deformable mirror (to improve its protection); 2) a replacement to the internal communications network (to improve robustness); and 3) a number of software improvements to several subsystems, including changes to improve adaptive optics performance. On the lab’s telescope flexure rig, in late February, we tested how GPI’s performance changes under various gravitational vectors, prior to mounting the instrument back on the telescope’s upward looking port. One significant measured change was the reduc- GeminiFocus 13