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The Near Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph for the James Webb Space Telescope -- I. Instrument Overview and in-Flight Performance

Authors :
Doyon, Rene
Willott, C. J
Hutchings, John B.
Sivaramakrishnan, Anand
Albert, Loic
Lafreniere, David
Rowlands, Neil
Vila, M. Begona
Martel, Andre R.
LaMassa, Stephanie
Aldridge, David
Artigau, Etienne
Cameron, Peter
Chayer, Pierre
Cook, Neil J.
Cooper, Rachel A.
Darveau-Bernier, Antoine
Dupuis, Jean
Earnshaw, Colin
Espinoza, Nestor
Filippazzo, Joseph C.
Fullerton, Alexander W.
Gaudreau, Daniel
Gawlik, Roman
Goudfrooij, Paul
Haley, Craig
Kammerer, Jens
Kendall, David
Lambros, Scott D.
Ignat, Luminita Ilinca
Maszkiewicz, Michael
McColgan, Ashley
Morishita, Takahiro
Ouellette, Nathalie N. -Q.
Pacifici, Camilla
Philippi, Natasha
Radica, Michael
Ravindranath, Swara
Rowe, Jason
Roy, Arpita
Saad, Karl
Sohn, Sangmo Tony
Talens, Geert Jan
Thatte, Deepashri
Taylor, Joanna M.
Vandal, Thomas
Volk, Kevin
Wander, Michel
Warner, Gerald
Zheng, Sheng-Hai
Zhou, Julia
Abraham, Roberto
Beaulieu, Mathilde
Benneke, Bjorn
Ferrarese, Laura
Johnstone, Doug
Kaltenegger, Lisa
Meyer, Michael R.
Pipher, Judy L.
Rameau, Julien
Rieke, Marcia
Salhi, Salma
Sawicki, Marcin
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Near-Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph (NIRISS) is the science module of the Canadian-built Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS) onboard the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). NIRISS has four observing modes: 1) broadband imaging featuring seven of the eight NIRCam broadband filters, 2) wide-field slitless spectroscopy (WFSS) at a resolving power of $\sim$150 between 0.8 and 2.2 $\mu$m, 3) single-object cross-dispersed slitless spectroscopy (SOSS) enabling simultaneous wavelength coverage between 0.6 and 2.8 $\mu$m at R$\sim$700, a mode optimized for exoplanet spectroscopy of relatively bright ($J<6.3$) stars and 4) aperture masking interferometry (AMI) between 2.8 and 4.8 $\mu$m enabling high-contrast ($\sim10^{-3}-10^{-4}$) imaging at angular separations between 70 and 400 milliarcsec for relatively bright ($M<8$) sources. This paper presents an overview of the NIRISS instrument, its design, its scientific capabilities, and a summary of in-flight performance. NIRISS shows significantly better response shortward of $\sim2.5\,\mu$m resulting in 10-40% sensitivity improvement for broadband and low-resolution spectroscopy compared to pre-flight predictions. Two time-series observations performed during instrument commissioning in the SOSS mode yield very stable spectro-photometry performance within $\sim$10% of the expected noise. The first space-based companion detection of the tight binary star AB Dor AC through AMI was demonstrated.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2306.03277
Document Type :
Working Paper