Telescopes I've Used - Gemini Observatory

Gemini-North dome


Gemini Observatory, Mauna Kea, Hawaii, and Cerro Pachon, Chile

The Gemini project culminated in the construction of two 8-meter, infrared-optimized telescopes spanning both hemispheres and the whole sky. However you slice it, the Gemini project also spanned both of Earth's hemispheres, as a partnership involving the USA, UK, Canada, Australia, Argentina, Chile, and Brazil. Gemini-North, in the only place where an 8-meter telescope rates as only the fourth largest optical/IR instrument on-site, was recently renamed in honor of the late Fred Gillette, who played an indispensible role in the entire planning and construction stages.

Gemini-North telescope Gemini-North dome at dusk

The Gemini instrument complement is still growing, delayed by a crisis involving the near-IR spectrograph and loss of a multiobject spectrograph with the destruction of Australia's Mt. Stromlo Observatory in a wildfire. It does have several very powerful instruments already, particularly GMOS, the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrometer, and the first generally usable AO system available to the whole US community. As part of a team including Ian Smail, Frazer Owen, and inside spy Mike Ledlow, I've actually gotten my hands on GMOS data for high-redshift candidates behind a couple of galaxy clusters (where we had very deep optical and radio data to selectr and understand the candidates). This is sort of funny, considering the nuisance I made of myself for several years about whether Gemini would be a net gain for the US community if it caused closure of the facilities elsewhere, especially Kitt Peak, to pay its upkeep. The jury's still out - I may yet owe Todd Boroson a public apology.

Setting up a multiobject observation can be tedious. One starts with an acquisition image taken by GMOS acting as a camera, using it to define the object locations on a consistent internal system (distortions and everything) to fabricate the slit masks. One may try numerous potential rotation settings to maximize the number of interesting targets that can be observed without their spectra overlapping. If we don't mess this up, we end up with a set of short-slit spectra of our faint targets.

Abell 851 acquisition image with Gemini-N GMOS The process starts with a 2Kx3K acquisition image, like this one of Abell 851 in the I band. Even when adaptive optics are not in use, the Gemini system pays a lot of attention to the wavefront and image quality, keeping the optical train actively aligned and focused. This stack of 3 images, taken in pretty mediocre conditions since it's not actually supposed to be science-grade, has 1.1" FWHM. Numerous galaxies show up in the "foreground" cluster at z=0.4, among the richest known.







Setting up GMOS aperture mask on Abell 851 Here's one of Mike's setups for Abell 851, using the Gemini software tools. Note how the whole projected spectrum for each slit position is shown so you can check for overlaps with something else that ought to be observed as well.













GMOS raw multispectral data And now to the real data. GMOS places short slits across the objects of interest, so you get over 200 independent spectra (if you have useful things to do with that many in one field). Reduction involves a heavy dose of sheer bookkeeping. Here are some spectra in the blue, with a few showing emission lines even before subtracting night-sky airglow that produces the lines running all along each slit.













One especially interesting result of our initial spectra was detecting a galaxy previously found as a bright submillimeter source, revealed as an active galaxy at redshift z=3.35. This plot shows data from red and blue grating settings, with strong emission lines of hydrogen, nitrogen, and carbon with ratios characteristic of active nuclei rather than starbursts.

GMOS spectrum of submm-selected AGN at z=3.35

Some of the same crew have also used IR images from Gemini-South to complement HST images of the spiral galaxy hosting the double radio source 0313-192. Here are JHK images from the FLAMINGOS system, with image quality 0.36-0.40 arcsec FWHM:

Gemini-S FLAMINGOs images of 0313-192

Telescope Collection

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