4.1 Article

Subaru Prime Focus Camera - Suprime-Cam

Journal

PUBLICATIONS OF THE ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN
Volume 54, Issue 6, Pages 833-853

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/pasj/54.6.833

Keywords

instrumentation : detectors; techniques : image processing; telescopes

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We have built an 80-mega pixels (10240 x 8192) mosaic CCD camera, called Suprime-Cam, for the wide-field prime focus of the 8.2 m Subaru telescope. Suprime-Cam covers a field of view 34' x 27', a unique facility among the 8-10 m class telescopes, with a resolution of 0.202 per pixel. The focal plane consists of ten high-resistivity 2k x 4k CCDs developed by MIT Lincoln Laboratory, which are cooled by a large Stirling-cycle cooler. The CCD readout electronics was designed to be scalable, which allows the multiple read-out of tens of CCDs. It takes 50 seconds to readout entire arrays. We designed a filter-exchange mechanism of the jukebox type that can hold up to ten large filters (205 x 170 x 15 mm(3)). The wide-field corrector is basically a three-lens Wynne-type, but has a new type of atmospheric dispersion corrector. The corrector provides a flat focal plane and an un-vignetted field of view of 30' in diameter. The achieved co-planarity of the focal array mosaic is smaller than 30 gm peak-to-peak, which realizes mostly the seeing limited image over the entire field. The median seeing in the I-c-band, measured over one year and a half, is 0.61. The PSF anisotropy in Suprime-Cam images, estimated by stellar ellipticities, is about 2% under this median seeing condition. At the time of commissioning, Suprime-Cam had the largest survey speed, which is defined as the field of view multiplied by the primary mirror area of the telescope, among those cameras built for sub-arcsecond imaging.

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