Ghosts of NEID's Past

1 Dec 2020  ·  Shubham Kanodia, Joe P. Ninan, Andrew J. Monson, Suvrath Mahadevan, Colin Nitroy, Christian Schwab, Samuel Halverson, Chad F. Bender, Ryan Terrien, Frederick R. Hearty, Emily Lubar, Michael W. McElwain, Lawrence. W. Ramsey, Paul M. Robertson, Arpita Roy, Gudmundur Stefansson, Daniel J. Stevens ·

The NEID spectrograph is a R $\sim$ 120,000 resolution fiber-fed and highly stabilized spectrograph for extreme radial velocity (RV) precision. It is being commissioned at the 3.5 m WIYN telescope in Kitt Peak National Observatory with a desired instrumental precision of better than 30 \cms{}. NEID's bandpass of 380 -- 930 nm enables the simultaneous wavelength coverage of activity indicators from the Ca HK lines in the blue to the Ca IR triplet in the IR. In this paper we will present our efforts to characterize and mitigate optical ghosts in the NEID spectrograph during assembly, integration and testing, and highlight several of the dominant optical element contributors such as the cross dispersion prism and input optics. We shall present simulations of the 2-D spectrum and discuss the predicted ghost features on the focal plane, and how they may impact the RV performance for NEID. We also present the mitigation strategy adopted for each ghost which may be applied to future instrument designs. This work will enable other instrument builders to potentially avoid some of these issues, as well as outline mitigation strategies.

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Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics Earth and Planetary Astrophysics