We describe the design and science case for a spectrograph for the prime
focus of classical 4-m wide-field telescopes that can deliver at least 4000 MOS
slits over a 1 degree field. This extreme multiplex capability means that 25000
galaxy redshifts can be measured in a single night, opening up the
possibilities for large galaxy redshift surveys out to z~0.7 and beyond for the
purpose of measuring the Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) scale and for many
other science goals. The design features four cloned spectrographs and exploits
the exclusive possibility of tiling the focal plane of wide-field 4-m
telescopes with CCDs for multi-object spectroscopic purposes. In ~200 night
projects, such spectrographs have the potential to make galaxy redshift surveys
of ~6 million galaxies over a wide redshift range and thus may provide a
low-cost alternative to other survey routes such as WFMOS and SKA. Two of these
extreme multiplex spectrographs are currently being designed for the AAT
(NG1dF) and Calar Alto (XMS) 4-m class telescopes. NG2dF, a larger version for
the AAT 2 degree field, would have 12 clones and at least 12000 slits. The
clones use a transparent design including a grism in which all optics are
smaller than the clone square subfield so that the clones can be tightly packed
with little gaps between the contiguous fields. Only low cost glasses are used;
the variations in chromatic aberrations between bands are compensated by
changing one or two of the lenses adjacent to the grism. The total weight and
length is smaller with a few clones than a unique spectrograph which makes it
feasible to place the spectrograph at the prime focus.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, to appear in proceedings of Astronomical
Telescopes and Instrumentation, SPIE conference, Marseille, 23-28 June, 200