System engineering at the MEGARA project

DOI: 
10.1117/12.2055916
Publication date: 
01/08/2014
Main author: 
Pérez-Calpena A.
IAA authors: 
Iglesias-Páramo, J.
Authors: 
Pérez-Calpena A., García-Vargas M.L., Gil De Paz A., Gallego Maestro J., Carrasco Licea E., Sánchez Moreno F., Iglesias-Páramo J.
Journal: 
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Publication type: 
Article
Volume: 
9150
Pages: 
Number: 
915026
Abstract: 
MEGARA (Multi-Espectrógrafo en GTC de Alta Resolución para Astronomía) is a facility instrument of the 10.4m GTC (La Palma, Spain) working at optical wavelengths that provides both Integral-Field Unit (IFU) and Multi-Object Spectrograph (MOS) capabilities at resolutions in the range R=6,000-20,000. The MEGARA focal plane subsystems are located at one of the GTC focal stations, while the MEGARA refractive VPH based spectrograph is located at one of the Nasmyth platforms. The fiber bundles conduct the light from the focal plane subsystems to the pseudo-slits at the entrance of the spectrograph. The project is an initiative led by Universidad Complutense de Madrid (Spain) in collaboration with INAOE (Mexico), IAA-CSIC (Spain) and Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (Spain) and is developed under contract with GRANTECAN. The project is carried out by a multidisciplinary and geographically distributed team, which includes the in-kind contributions of the project partners and personnel from several private companies. The MEGARA system-engineering plan has been tailored to the project and is being applied to ensure the technical control of the project in order to finally meet the science high-level requirements and GTC constrains. © 2014 SPIE.
Database: 
SCOPUS
ADS
URL: 
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2014SPIE.9150E..26P/abstract
ADS Bibcode: 
2014SPIE.9150E..26P
Keywords: 
anomalies; configuration control; GTC; Interfaces; MEGARA; non-conformities; Product Tree; RAMS; requirements and specification; System engineering; technical budgets; verification