First light:
December 1984.
Last commissioning:
Designed and built by:
Durham University and RGO.
Description: The Faint Object Spectrograph (FOS)
is an efficient, fixed-format spectrograph with a CCD detector used for
low resolution (15-20 Å FWHM) spectrophotometry over the wavelength
range 4000-10000 Å. The optical design is a Schmidt camera without
a collimator in the diverging beam from the Cassegrain focus. The dispersion
is provided by a transmission grating and a cross-dispersing prism, which
give a two-order format. The principal advantage of the FOS is its high
throughput - 12% for the combination of atmosphere, telescope and FOS at
7000 Å - some three times larger than that of the IDS with the same
detector. It is highly appropiate for the study of emission-line objects
such as quasars, radio galaxies, HII regions and planetary nebulae, but
less useful for absorption-line objects (particularly those with narrow
features) owing to its low resolution. There are four operating modes:
beamswitching for point sources; beamswitching with a larger throw for
extended objects; long slit (first order only) and 25 arc sec slit (both
orders).
Some scientific highlights:
More information: The
Faint Object Spectrograph for the 2.5-m Isaac Newton Telescope
(MNRAS, 227,909)
More photos of this instrument: http://www.ing.iac.es/PR/archive/int/instruments.html