GeminiFocus December 2012 | Page 32

the full fiber cable commercially, the project has been delayed by a few months, but we should still see on-telescope testing beginning in early 2013 at Gemini North. Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph CCD Upgrade: In the June 2012 issue of GeminiFocus, we highlighted our plan to install the new Hamamatsu CCDs into the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph (GMOS) at Gemini North in January 2013, and subsequent installation into GMOS at Gemini South in semester 2013B. Given the successful installation of the deep depletion e2v CCDs into GMOSN in 2011, scientific priorities expressed by Gemini’s Science and Technology Advisory Committee and other community members, and resource conflicts with other projects at Gemini, we have instead decided to install the CCDs into GMOS-S first. Figure 4. GMOS-CCD metrology setup at the Hilo Base Facility lab. This is used to precisely align the three new detector chips. 32 Given the current activity at Gemini South with FLAMINGOS-2, GeMS, and GSAOI, as well as the expected delivery of GPI in the southern autumn, the earliest window for installation into GMOS-S is now around June 2013. Installing within this window, however, necessitates there being other instruments GeminiFocus capable of filling the queue with GMOS off the telescope. GeMS, GSAOI, FLAMINGOS-2, and GPI should all be available, but if two or more of these projects suffer additional setbacks, we may have to delay the GMOS-S CCD installation until these other instruments become available. Our baseline plan, though, is to install the CCDs in GMOS-S in the southern winter, then into GMOS-N in early 2014. Meanwhile, we believe the hardware signal filtering mentioned in our last GeminiFocus article, and implemented by Gemini’s Detector Engineer, Kevin Hanna, has satisfactorily reduced the read noise. We have also replaced one previously damaged science CCD. The new CCD comes with an enhanced coating from Hamamatsu which maintains the red sensitivity of the other two CCDs and adds blue sensitivity quite similar to the current GMOS-S CCDs. This new CCD, therefore, will be placed in the blue-most spectral position in the array to make maximum use of its enhanced sensitivity in that part of the spectrum. Figure 4 shows the setup used at the Hilo Base Facility to precisely align the three new CCD chips. Kevin has also developed an internal electrostatic discharge (ESD) protection circuit that will fit inside the GMOS dewar and seat between the CCDs and the outside world. ESD consultants have reviewed and approved this circuit that will help make the new CCDs safe for what we hope is a long life inside the GMOS instruments. Unlike the e2v CCDs currently in GMOS, these new Hamamatsu detectors do not have built-in ESD protection, and thus, these very sensitive devices are quite vulnerable to damage. Once installed, this circuit should provide the missing required protection. December2012