MODS1 and MODS2 are a pair of low- to medium-resolution Multi-Object Double CCD Spectrographs/Imagers designed and built by OSU for the twin 8.4-meter diameter mirror Large Binocular Telescope on Mt. Graham in southeastern Arizona. The two MODS are identical two-channel spectrographs, one for each of the direct f/15 Gregorian foci of the LBT, that can work in tandem on a single target to exploit the full 11.8-meter effective aperture of the twin LBT mirrors. They may also be configured individually for increased multiplex advantage (e.g., take spectra of twice as many targets in the same field), configured for complementary observations (e.g., MODS1 for red-only and MODS2 for blue-only when spectral features of interest might otherwise be lost to the dichroic cross-over wavelength region), or as half of a hybrid configuration with one MODS on one focal station working in parallel with the LUCI spectrograph on the other focal station to provide nearly continuous medium-resolution simultaneous spectral coverage from 0.32 to 2.5-microns. Parallel MODS+LBC configurations for joint imaging and spectrophotometric time-series work are also possible.
Each MODS is a seeing-limited spectrograph and imager working in the 320-1100nm wavelength range with a 6x6-arcminute field of view. Gratings provide a spectral resolution of R~2000 and double-pass prisms provide a low-resolution (R=500-150) faint-object mode. Multi-object spectroscopy is accomplished using laser-machined focal-plane slit masks fed into the beam from a 24-position mask cassette. A beam selector below the slit carries a dichroic that splits the incoming beam into separate red- and blue-optimized channels at a wavelength of 565nm. Each spectrograph channel has separately optimized collimators, dispersers, cameras, and detector, allowing simultaneous operation across the entire CCD band. The beam selector can also direct light into the red or blue channels alone, providing blue-/red-only modes to extend wavelength coverage into the dichroic cross-over for one channel. The MODS science detetors are 3Kx8K monolithic E2V CCDs; blue-coated standard silicon on the blue channel and extended-red coated 40-micron deep depletion silicon on the red channel.
MODS1 passed its laboratory acceptance review in April 2010 and was shipped to the LBT in May 2010 where it was reassembled and tested in the mountain instrument lab. It was successfully installed at the LBT left direct Gregorian focal station on 2010 August 31. After thorough technical and science commissioning from September 2010 through May 2011, MODS1 entered regular service for science observing in September 2011.
MODS2 was assembled and tested at OSU starting in 2011, and passed its laboratory acceptance review in August 2013. It was shipped to LBTO in October 2013 for re-assembly and testing, and installed on the LBT for the first time on 2014 April 9. Technical and science commissioning ran from 2014 until early 2015 when MODS2 became available for limited science operation.
Full binocular operation with both MODS was initiated at the start of 2016 in shared risk mode, and became the default observing mode in fall of 2016.
Our Sponsors: | ||
MODS is supported by the Ohio State University with major support provided by grants from National Science Foundation's Division of Astronomical Sciences Advanced Technologies and Instrumention (AST-9987045) and NSF/NOAO TSIP Programs, and with matching funds provided by the Ohio State University Office of Research and the Ohio Board of Regents. Graduate students have been supported by the David G. Price Fellowship in Astronomical Instrumentation.