Prime Focus Spectrograph is a next-generation spectroscopic instrument being installed on Subaru Telescope. The key to the success of its cosmological survey is accurate sky subtraction to extract galaxy emission lines from very bright night-sky emissions. We model the two-dimensional point spread function considering various e↵ects such as optical aberrations in the spectrographs and vignetting on the telescope prime focal plane. We are developing models using commissioning data, and currently we have achieved 1 % precision in one-dimensional spectra for the aberration model.
The instrumentation of the Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS), a next generation facility instrument on the Subaru telescope, is now in the final phase of its commissioning process and its general, open-use operations for sciences will provisionally start in 2025. The instrument enables simultaneous spectroscopy with 2386 individual fibers distributed over a very wide (∼1.3 degrees in diameter) field of view on the Subaru’s prime focus. The spectra cover a wide range of wavelengths from 380nm to 1260nm in one exposure in the Low-Resolution (LR) mode (while the visible red channel has the Medium-Resolution (MR) mode as well that covers 710−885nm). The system integration activities at the observatory on Maunakea in Hawaii have been continuing since the arrival of the Metrology Camera System in 2018. On-sky engineering tests and observations have also been carried out continually since September 2021 and, despite various difficulties in interlacing commissioning processes with development activities on the schedule and addressing some major issues on hardware and software, the team successfully observed many targeted stars as intended over the entire field of view (Engineering First Light) in September 2022. Then in parallel to the arrival, integration and commissioning of more hardware components, validations and optimizations of the performance and operation of the instrument are ongoing. The accuracy of the fiber positioning process and the speed of the fiber reconfiguration process have been recently confirmed to be ∼ 20−30μm for 95% of allocated fibers, and ∼130 seconds, respectively. While precise quantitative analyses are still in progress, the measured throughput has been confirmed to be consistent with the model where the information from various sub-components and sub-assemblies is integrated. Long integration of relatively faint objects are being taken to validate an expected increase of signal-to-noise ratio as more exposures are taken and co-added without any serious systematic errors from, e.g., sky subtraction process. The PFS science operation will be carried out in a queue mode by default and various developments, implementations and validations have been underway accordingly in parallel to the instrument commissioning activities. Meetings and sessions are arranged continually with the communities of potential PFS users on multiple scales, and discussions are iterated for mutual understanding and possible optimization of the rules and procedures over a wide range of processes such as proposal submission, observation planning, data acquisition and data delivery. The end-to-end processes of queue observations including successive exposures with updated plans based on assessed qualities of the data from past observations are being tested during engineering observations, and further optimizations are being undertaken. In this contribution, a top-level summary of these achievements and ongoing progresses and future perspectives will be provided.
The predicted efficiency of the Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) for the Subaru telescope at Mauna Kea took a serious hit at the discovery of an error in the mounting of its volume phase holographic gratings (VPHG). Alerted by unexpected jumps in spectral flux between the blue and red channels in the first two spectrograph modules as they became available on sky, inspection of the gratings as mounted into the fourth and last module, still present in the lab, confirmed that all its gratings – three low-resolution (blue, red, NIR) gratings and a medium resolution grating and prism assembly (grism) – were indeed all mounted upside down. In this paper, after reporting on the observations leading to this discovery, we describe the corrective actions taken, illustrating by on-sky spectra full recovery of performance. Finally, we discuss the causes for this potentially catastrophic error, with an emphasis on the difficulty of ensuring verification at all levels (preliminary and final design, procurement, manufacturing, and AIT phases) for the giant instruments we are currently building and designing. We provide guidelines for future instrument designers in order to minimize the risk of such flaws happening again.
The Subaru Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) will soon be the first massively multiplexed wide-field spectrograph on an 8-meter class telescope. PFS’s spectrograph system covers the optical to near-infrared—380 to 1260 nm—in a single exposure and is fed by 2394 reconfigurable fibers distributed across a 1.3-degree wide field of view. Building upon deep multiband imaging catalogs, particularly from Subaru’s Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) imager, PFS will fuel future discoveries in cosmology, galaxy evolution, and galactic archaeology. To fully leverage Subaru’s 8.2 meter aperture and probe the faintest targets, accurate spectral reduction and sky subtraction are critical to PFS’s operation. During commissioning of PFS, the accuracy of the sky-subtraction algorithms is being assessed through direct observations of the night sky. In this paper, we report the current status of the sky-subtraction routines, as determined from the commissioning data.
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