GeminiFocus 2015 Year in Review | Page 62

Prepping and Using GRACES Figure 3. Comparison of the GRACES spectrum of Feige 66 observed in the two-slice mode, and the HIRES spectrum leveled to match GRACES observations weather conditions and resolution. GRACES consists of three components: (1) an injection module (Figure 4) that sends light from the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph at Gemini North (GMOS-N) into (2) the two long fiber cables (that connect Gemini North to CFHT, and (3) a receiver unit responsible for injecting the light from the fibers into the ESPaDOnS. First GRACES’ Science Paper The first paper based upon GRACES data is nearing completion by Lison Malo of CFHT. Her work focuses on nearby young associations of stars in order to better understand their formation history, determine the initial mass function, and test theories of stellar evolution. Her team’s work with GRACES is to establish the membership and age of very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs in nearby kinematic groups. Observations focus on the most probable candidates visible in the sky in Semester 2015B that do not currently have high-resolution spectra. Shown here is representative GRACES data of an M6 dwarf which is a target from Malo’s research program. It is expected that Malo’s work will be published soon in a Letter, which will also include a description of the data reduction pipeline. 60 GeminiFocus In preparation of a GRACES observing block, Gemini staff need to install the injection module in GMOS-N, occupying the same mask slot as the instrument’s integral field unit (IFU). The injection can, like the IFU, be moved in and out the beam, so GMOS-N imaging capability can be used for the target acquisition. On the CFHT side, the pick-off mirror in the receiver unit injecting Gemini’s light in ESPaDOnS is deployed, and the control of the spectrograph is given over to the Gemini observer. This handover process requires transparent communication between Gemini and CFHT at each step and has proven to work very well. For Gemini’s users, GRACES provides highresolution (up to R ~ 67,500) optical (400 – 1000 nm) spectroscopic capabilities with an on-sky fiber covering 1.2 arcseconds. Because of its unique configuration (i.e., the GRACES injection module replaces the IFU module in GMOS-N, making it impossible to do both GMOS-N IFU and GRACES observations on the same night), it is only available for 10-night blocks, twice each semester. Proposing for GRACES is handled through the normal Gemini two-semester proposal process. 2015 Year in Review January 2016