A symmetrical triplet lens collimates the light from calibration fibres which are fed by a lamp assembly in the spectrograph room. A deployable beamsplitter cube (95/5) can direct about 5% of the calibration light into the fibre imager and the sky spectrograph fibre. About 95% of the object light is passed undisturbed so that a calibration spectrum can be acquired simultaneously with an object spectrum. When the deployable beamsplitter is replaced with a plane mirror both fibres can be calibrated simultaneously.

   A deployable alignment beamsplitter cube is inserted in the collimated space between the calibration beamsplitter mirror and the pupil stop. The function of the beamsplitter is three-fold:

1. It directs the light from the back illuminated spectrograph fibres into a small general purpose CCD camera;
2. It directs light from the pinholes into the CCD camera; and
3. It can direct light from the calibration fibres into the CCD camera.

In this way, the images of the pinholes, the spectrograph fibres and the calibration fibres can be co-aligned for optimum throughput by overlaying their images on the alignment CCD.