GeminiFocus 2018 Year in Review | Page 65

trol System maintenance. Additional work planned includes enclosure bogie work and enclosure bottom shutter work, which will commence later in the shutdown. Big Island Mechanical, the contractor install- ing the Gemini North energy savings hard- ware, worked together with Gemini day crew to move the new Chiller 2 modules into the Exhaust Tunnel and onto the vibration isola- tion frame. Gemini is also temporarily shut- ting down the Chiller 1 cooling water circuit during the shutdown so that Big Island Me- chanical can cut into the existing piping to install new hardware. JULY 2018 IGRINS Achieves First Light at Gemini South IGRINS, the visiting high-resolution near- infrared spectrometer — a collaboration of the University of Texas Austin (UT Austin) and the Korea Astronomy and Space Sci- ence Institute (KASI) — achieved first light on the night of April 2nd at Gemini South, with a remarkable spectrum of the T-Tauri star TW Hydrae (Figure 12). What’s unique about IGRINS is its revolu- tionary combination of spectral coverage (the entire H and K bands in a single expo- sure), high spectral resolution (R = 45,000) and high throughput (achieved through January 2019 / 2018 Year in Review the use of a silicon immersion grating). It is also extremely compact and mechanically simple — having a single observing mode and no cryogenic moving parts. IGRINS adapts easily to different telescopes, re- quiring only a change of either fore-optics or input optics; in the case of Gemini, the input optics required replacement. IGRINS and Gemini South offer the most powerful combination yet. Since installation, IGRINS has been perform- ing exactly as expected; at its spectral reso- lution (45,000), IGRINS’ sensitivity is about seven times better than any other high-reso- lution IR spectrometer on an 8- to 10-meter- class telescope, and it has many times the spectral coverage of other instruments at that resolution. Not surprisingly, demand for it at Gemini has been extremely high, with a list of 21 approved programs from the Gem- ini Participants, as well as a Large and Long Program of the instrument team. This is IGRINS’ first visit to the Southern Hemisphere, and the results from our first light target, TW Hydrae, is a good exam- ple of how much latitude matters. When IGRINS was running at McDonald Observa- tory in the Northern Hemisphere, observers worked hard for several years to obtain a spectrum of TW Hydrae, which was always very low in the Texas sky. With IGRINS at Gemini South, however, TW Hya was right overhead, and the first-light spectrum was not only quickly and easily observed, GeminiFocus Figure 12. IGRINS+Gemini South first light. Left:TW Hydrae in the slit-viewing camera. Center: the H-band spectrum. Right: the K-band spectrum. Credit: K. Sokal and the IGRINS team 63