The Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) is a 10-m class fixed-elevation telescope with a primary mirror composed of 91 spherically figured one metre segments. A prime focus tracker assembly carries the spherical aberration corrector (SAC) and two of SALT’s instruments, SALTICAM (the acquisition and imaging camera) and the multi-purpose Robert Stobie spectrograph (RSS). Included in the tracker payload is a fibre-instrument feed, that positions ~45m long fibre cables coupled to the spectrographs in thermal enclosures beneath the telescope. These are the High-Resolution Spectrograph (HRS) and NIRWALS (Near InfraRed Washburn Astronomical Laboratories Spectrograph). The other major undertaking is a custom-built laser frequency comb and precision radial velocity data pipeline for the HRS, due in 2025. A novel RSS slit-mask IFU was recently commissioned, adding optical IFU spectroscopy to SALT’s capabilities. Work is also underway to develop a new red channel to turn the RSS into a dual-beam spectrograph. A study done in 2021 investigated the feasibility of building deployable robotic arms equipped with mini SACs to take advantage of SALT’s huge uncorrected field of view. Lastly, a pre-study is now underway to explore options for replacing the SAC and prime focus payload on the tracker to improve telescope performance and make provision for future instrument development.
The facility instrument suite at the Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) is being extended into the near-infrared by the arrival of the SALT-NIR spectrograph in 2022. The SALT-NIR is fiber-fed via a set of integral field units that interfaces with the existing Fiber Instrument Feed. Extending the operational wavelength range of SALT from 320 - 900 nm to 320 - 1700 nm requires a number of changes to the physical and optical telescope subsystems and places new demands on its control and pointing software. We present the requirements, design and implementation of these updated systems.
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