Preliminary results on the characterization and performances of ZBLAN fiber for infrared spectrographs
Abstract
Present telescopes and future extremely large telescopes make use of fiber-fed spectrographs to observe at optical and infrared wavelengths. The use of fibers largely simplifies the interfacing of the spectrograph to the telescope. At a high spectral resolution (R>50,000) the fibers can be used to achieve very high spectral accuracy. GIANO is an infrared (0.95-2.5μ m) high resolution (R=50,000) spectrometer[1] [2] [3] that was recently commissioned at the TNG telescope (La Palma). This instrument was designed and built for direct feeding from the telescope [4]. However, due to constraints imposed on the telescope interfacing during the pre-commissioning phase, it had to be positioned on the rotating building, far from the telescope focus. Therefore, a new interface to the telescope, based on IR-transmitting ZBLAN fibers with 85 μ m core, was developed. In this article we report the first, preliminary results of the effects of these fibers on the quality of the recorded spectra with GIANO and with a similar spectrograph that we set-up in the laboratory. The effects can be primarily associated to modal-noise (MN) that, in GIANO, is much more evident than in optical spectrometers, because of the much longer wavelengths.
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