NICMOS Grisms
NICMOS provides slit-less grism imaging
spectroscopy in the spectral range
between 0.8 and 2.5 microns with Camera 3
(see NICMOS ISR-97-027). All
objects in
the Camera 3 field-of-view are
dispersed for true multi-object
spectroscopy. There are
three grisms (G096, G141, G206), each of
infrared grade fused silica, which cover
the entire NICMOS wavelength range
with a spectral resolving power of ~200
per pixel. The grisms reside in the
Camera 3 filter wheel, and the spatial
resolution of the spectroscopy is the same as
for Camera 3 imaging (~0.203"/pixel).
A grism is a combination of a prism and grating arranged to
keep light at a chosen central wavelength undeviated as it passes through the grism.
The resolution of a grism is proportional to the tangent of the wedge angle of the
prism in much the same way as the resolution of gratings are proportional to the
angle between the input and the normal to the grating. Grisms are normally inserted
into a collimated camera beam. The grism then creates a dispersed spectrum centered
on the location of the object in the camera field of view. Figure 5.9
shows an example of grism spectra of a point source using G096, G141, and G206.
The target is the brightest source in the FOV, although many other sources yield useful
spectra as well. The band along the bottom of the images, about ~15-20 rows wide, is
due to vignetting by the FDA mask, while the faint dispersed light on the right edge
of the G206 grating image is due to the warm edge of the aperture mask.
The two shorter wavelength grisms exploit the low natural
background of HST while the longest wavelength grism is subject to the thermal
background emission from HST. For more information on the NICMOS grisms, visit
the Space Telescope
European Coordinating Facility's NICMOS web page. Please note that this page
will no longer be supported by ST-ECF.
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