The vast majority of STIS first-order grating mode observations use a long slit. The use of a long slit ensures a clean separation of emission lines arising from different spatial features. However, all of STIS’ first-order gratings as well as the NUV PRISM (see
Table 4.1) can also be used slitless or with a wide slit to obtain emission line images.
Figure 12.1 below shows a schematic example of a slitless spectrogram.
Figure 4.8 shows an image of SN1987A observed using the
52X2 aperture, and as the source is smaller than the slit, this is effectively a slitless image.
When STIS is used slitless (or with a wide slit), the image obtained will be the sum of a series of shifted monochromatic images of the field of view. The range of wavelengths covered in the series of monochromatic images is dictated by the spectral range of the grating. The result is that there is
not a one-to-one mapping of pixel location to wavelength in your image or of pixel location to spatial location on the sky. Depending on the structure of your source and the grating you use, it may be easy to deconvolve the spatial and spectral information, or it may be very difficult.
Slitless spectroscopy can be employed either for prime or parallel STIS observing, (although MAMA pure parallels are not allowed). If you are designing a slitless spectroscopic observation there are a few important points to keep in mind:
In order to properly calibrate slitless data it is necessary to know the position of each source along the dispersion direction. This usually requires a STIS, ACS, WFC3, or archival image at comparable spatial resolution and imaged with a comparable bandpass to the emission line structure that is being imaged with the slitless STIS spectroscopy. Obtaining the image during the same visit and at the same position angle as the slitless spectroscopy simplifies the image registration and analysis. Variations in the positioning of the Mode Select Mechanism (MSM), which contains the mirrors and gratings, can result in an uncertainty of the position of an image or spectrum on the detector by as much as five pixels, and an additional special calibration may be needed in order to fix the absolute offset between the images and the spectrograms. The standard STIS
ACQ procedure automatically measures the offset between the location of a star and a reference aperture on the CCD detector and uses this to place the target accurately in the desired slit. So if the
ACQ target appears in the field of view, there is no need for an additional image to calibrate the MSM offset, although a separate full field image may still be needed to measure the relative positions of other sources with respect to the
ACQ target. In cases where no STIS
ACQ exposure is done, an image of the field should be taken either immediately following or immediately preceding a lamp image taken through a narrow slit. For the CCD, a 1 second tungsten lamp exposure with the
52X0.1 slit will do nicely. This will allow the MSM offset for that image to be determined. It is important that no MSM motion (mirror or grating change) occur between the sky image and the lamp image of the slit. The MSM offset for the spectrographic exposure itself can usually be measured from the standard wavecal exposure. If extremely precise alignment between the spectrum and the field image in the cross dispersion direction is also required for source identification, this procedure may require some modifications, and observers should consult their contact scientist or the STScI
Help Desk.
Finally, we note that to achieve an accurate wavelength calibration for targets observed in slitless mode, when those targets are well displaced from the nominal
AXIS1 center, the dispersion coefficients at the off-nominal centerings must be well known. Currently, the incidence-angle offset corrections are based on ground calibration data and are somewhat less accurate than the on-axis dispersion solutions. We recommend that observers consult the
Help Desk if they are concerned about the calibration of observations taken of targets which are expected to be off-center by more than 1 arcsecond in the dispersion direction.