The LRS is a long-slit imaging spectrograph, located at the prime focus of the HET. It is described in Hill et al. (SPIE Conf. 3355, p 424, Kona, March 1998). Note that the position angle of the Prime Focus Instrument Package (PFIP) can be rotated to set up on arbitrary position angles, allowing exposures of more than one object simultaneously.
The instrument has two grism holders. The G1 grism is permanentlky mounted in one of the two holders, while the he other holder sometimes holds the G2 and sometimes the G3 grism.
Configuration names are constructed in line with the following convention:
<grism>_<slit width>_<filter name>. Examples
are found in the following table:
| Configuration | Grism | Slit (arcsec) | Filter |
|---|---|---|---|
| lrs_g1_1.0_GG385 | g1 | 1.0 | GG385 |
| lrs_g2_3.0_BK7 | g2 | 3.0 | BK7 |
| none | none | B |
We do not report on the imaging performance because the depth depends so much on image quality and sky brightness. This is not a useful telescope for deep imaging yet.
Use the following table to make rough estimates of exposure times for
your spectroscopic observations. These are sky-noise dominated
observations, so remember to scale by the sqrt(time):
| Configuration | Type of Object | Mag | Time (sec) | S/N @ Wavelength |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| lrs_g1_2.0_GG385 | stellar/QSO | 20 | 1800 | 15-20 @ 6500 Å |
| lrs_g1_2.0_GG385 | stellar/QSO | 21 | 1800 | 3-8 @ 6500 Å |
| lrs_g1_2.0_GG385 | distant galaxy | 21 | 1800 | 9-14 @ 6500 Å |
| lrs_g2_2.0_GG385 | distant galaxy | 21 | 1800 | 4-9 @ 6500 Å |
| lrs_g3_2.0_OG515 | stellar | 20 | 1800 | 14-17 @ 8000 Å |
In your proposals, you should state an integration time per object, rather than a required S/N ratio, since there are too many variables to scale. Delivered S/N ratio is determined primarily by the average image size during a track. The size depends on the temperature profile during the night, which determines the rate at which the primary mirror segments de-stack. On stable nights, 1.5 arcsec FWHM average is typical, but on poor nights it is worse. Hence, detailed S/N estimates are difficult, and the uncertainty is reflected in Table 3 above.
More detailed throughput informaiton is available at the HET Resident Astronomer Information Page. This link takes you directly to the LRS Throughput Page