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1. Introduction

Wollaston prisms are extensively used in focal plane astronomical instruments working at visual, and recently also at IR wavelengths (e.g. Packham et al. 1996). Their main practical advantage is that they allow a straightforward implementation of a polarimetric mode in multimode imager/spectrometers because a Wollaston prism inserted in the pupil plane of a focal reducer produces simultaneous images in two perpendicular polarization states on different parts of the array (see e.g. Fig. 3 (click here) of Fosbury et al. 1989). However, at least two separate measurements with the polarization axis rotated by tex2html_wrap_inline952 are required to derive the first 3 elements of the Stokes vector, i.e. to determine the polarization degree and angle.

The most common and reliable method to complete the polarimetric measurement is to use a rotating tex2html_wrap_inline954 plate before the Wollaston to modify the orientation of the polarization axis relative to the prism. This well known system may be difficult to implement in cryogenic instruments working in the IR for the following reasons.
- A rotating tex2html_wrap_inline956 retarder inside the cold dewar requires a complex mechanical design, especially in a multimode instrument where a mechanism for inserting/removing the tex2html_wrap_inline958 plate from the beam is also necessary.
- Adding a tex2html_wrap_inline960 plate before the dewar window and telescope focal plane may significantly increase the thermal background and produce ghosts.

A simpler method could be obtaining measurements at different position angles, i.e. rotate the whole instrument with respect to the telescope axis. This could be an effective solution for imaging-polarimetry but cannot be used for long slit spectro-polarimetry.

A convenient alternative could be a fixed device which simultaneously produces polarized images at 0, 45, 90 and 135 degrees on four different parts of the array yielding therefore imaging or spectro-polarimetric measurements from a single exposure and without moving anything. This paper describes a simple combination of two Wollastons and two prisms (wedges) which satisfies the above requirements. Parameters of devices optimized for imaging and spectro-polarimetry at visual and IR wavelengths are also presented in Sect. 3.

  figure216
Figure 1: Left: schematic representation of a WeDoWo device and ray-tracing. To prevent vignetting at the prisms interface the wedge angle is chosen to ensure that all rays (including those from the field edges) always travel above/below the optical axis. Center: illustration of how this device creates four polarized images (at 0, 90, 45 and 135 degrees) of a stellar field. Right: illustration of how the WeDoWo creates four long slit polarized spectra (at 0, 90, 45 and 135 degrees) of two stars


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