The WFC3 Infrared Spectroscopic Parallel (WISP) Survey
H. Atek, M. Malkan, P. McCarthy, H. Teplitz, C. Scarlata, B. Siana, A., Henry, J. Colbert, N.R. Ross, C. Bridge, A.J. Bunker, A. Dressler, R.A.E., Fosbury, C. martin, H. Shim

TL;DR
The WISP survey uses Hubble's WFC3 to obtain near-infrared slitless spectra of high-latitude fields, revealing emission-line galaxies and star formation activity across a broad redshift range, demonstrating the instrument's sensitivity to faint galaxies.
Contribution
This paper presents the first results from the WISP survey, showcasing the capabilities of WFC3 slitless spectroscopy for detecting faint emission-line galaxies at intermediate redshifts.
Findings
Detected 328 emission lines in 229 objects across 19 fields.
Achieved 5-sigma detection limits of 5 x 10^(-17) erg/s/cm^2 for emission lines.
Found a median star formation rate of 4 solar masses per year in Halpha-selected galaxies.
Abstract
We present the WFC3 Infrared Spectroscopic Parallel (WISP) Survey. WISP is obtaining slitless, near-infrared grism spectroscopy of ~ 90 independent, high-latitude fields by observing in the pure parallel mode with Wide Field Camera-3 on the Hubble Space Telescope for a total of ~ 250 orbits. Spectra are obtained with the G102 (lambda=0.8-1.17 microns, R ~ 210) and G141 grisms (lambda=1.11-1.67 microns, R ~ 130), together with direct imaging in the J- and H-bands (F110W and F140W, respectively). In the present paper, we present the first results from 19 WISP fields, covering approximately 63 square arc minutes. For typical exposure times (~ 6400 sec in G102 and ~ 2700 sec in G141), we reach 5-sigma detection limits for emission lines of 5 x 10^(-17) ergs s^(-1) cm^(-2) for compact objects. Typical direct imaging 5sigma-limits are 26.8 and 25.0 magnitudes (AB) in F110W and F140W,…
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