The Wisconsin Halpha Mapper (WHAM): A Brief Review of Performance Characteristics and Early Scientific Results
RJ Reynolds, SL Tufte, JW Percival, K jaehnig and LM Haffner
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia
15(1) 14 - 18
Published: 1998
Abstract
The Wisconsin Halpha Mapper (WHAM) is a recently completed facility for the detection and study of faint optical emission lines from diffuse ionised gas in the disk and halo of the Galaxy. WHAM consists of a 15 cm diameter Fabry-Perot spectrometer coupled to a 0.6 m `telescope', which provide a 1° diameter beam on the sky and produce a 12 km s^-1 resolution spectrum within a 200 km s^-1 spectral window. This facility is now located at Kitt Peak in Arizona and operated remotely from Madison, Wisconsin, 2400 km distant. Early results include a velocity-resolved Halpha map of a 70° x 100° region of the sky near the Galactic anticentre, the first detections of Halpha emission from the M I and A high velocity clouds, and the first detections of [O I] lambda6300 and other faint 'diagnostic' lines from the warm ionised medium. Through the summer of 1998, WHAM will be devoted almost exclusively to a survey of the northern sky, which will provide maps of the distribution and kinematics of the diffuse HII through the optical Halpha line in a manner that is analogous to earlier sky surveys of the HI made through the 21 cm line.https://doi.org/10.1071/AS98014
© ASA 1998