GeminiFocus 2015 Year in Review | Page 41

Southern Astrophysical Research (SOAR) telescope. The results were excellent. Also in the south, we continued to modify the cooling arrangements for the top-end control computer; the warmer ambient temperatures on Cerro Pachón have caused problems with condensation on the cooling lines in the past, causing us to lose telescope time due to high humidity. The modifications are designed to increase the flow rate to the top end, thus enabling the temperature of the cooling water to be reduced. Despite the loss of summit access for three days due to a spate of bad weather, we got back on sky on schedule — a considerable achievement reflecting the planning and effort that the whole team puts into these shutdowns. GMOS-S CCDs update Work is complete on two major quality issues with the GMOS Hamamatsu CCDs at Gemini South (see a detailed review of progress on this issue starting on page 32). The “saturation effect,” which produced banding artifacts on images with saturated pixels, was solved by a video board upgrade. Charge smearing effects, which we had also identified as an intermittent (and hard to reproduce) problem, were not convincingly identified; we could not pinpoint a particular cause in our investigation inside the detector cryostat, but the readout cable on the affected chip was replaced just in case. The smearing effect is now at a level so low that it will not affect any conceivable science observation. We have released an update to Gemini’s Image Reduction and Analysis Faciity (IRAF) which is capable of handling data from the new video boards and includes significant improvements to the GMOS data reduction examples. January 2016 Figure 4. Rehearsal for the Gemini South M1 recoating: Preparing to lift the dummy mirror. Visiting Instruments Gemini continues to welcome visiting instruments. After an absence of a few years, Phoenix (high-resolution near-infrared spectrograph) returns to Gemini South in 2016A. Also in the south, we will host a first run for the dual-band Differential Speckle Survey Instrument (DSSI). Watch the Call for Proposals pages for these and future opportunities. You may also have noticed that GRACES, our high-resolution spectroscopy capability realized by sharing CFHT’s ESPaDOnS Spec- 2015 Year in Review GeminiFocus Figure 5. GMOS-N g band zero point as a function of time. The various mirror coatings and CCD installations are marked with vertical dotted lines. Far right is the recent uptick due to the recoating of M2. 39