We present the current results from the development of a wide integral field
infrared spectrograph (WIFIS). WIFIS offers an unprecedented combination of
etendue and spectral resolving power for seeing-limited, integral field
observations in the 0.9-1.8 um range and is most sensitive in the 0.9-1.35 um
range. Its optical design consists of front-end re-imaging optics, an
all-reflective image slicer-type, integral field unit (IFU) called FISICA, and
a long-slit grating spectrograph back-end that is coupled with a HAWAII 2RG
focal plane array. The full wavelength range is achieved by selecting between
two different gratings. By virtue of its re-imaging optics, the spectrograph is
quite versatile and can be used at multiple telescopes. The size of its
field-of-view is unrivalled by other similar spectrographs, offering a 4.5" x
12" integral field at a 10-meter class telescope (or 20" x 50" at a 2.3-meter
telescope). The use of WIFIS will be crucial in astronomical problems which
require wide-field, two-dimensional spectroscopy such as the study of merging
galaxies at moderate redshift and nearby star/planet-forming regions and
supernova remnants. We discuss the final optical design of WIFIS, and its
predicted on-sky performance on two reference telescope platforms: the 2.3-m
Steward Bok telescope and the 10.4-m Gran Telescopio Canarias. We also present
the results from our laboratory characterization of FISICA. IFU properties such
as magnification, field-mapping, and slit width along the entire slit length
were measured by our tests. The construction and testing of WIFIS is expected
to be completed by early 2013. We plan to commission the instrument at the
2.3-m Steward Bok telescope at Kitt Peak, USA in Spring 2013.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures. Submitted to proceedings of the SPIE
Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation conference, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands, July 201