Optical performance of the JWST MIRI flight model: characterization of the point spread function at high-resolution
P. Guillard, T. Rodet, S. Ronayette, J. Amiaux, A. Abergel, V. Moreau,, J. L. Augueres, A. Bensalem, T. Orduna, C. Nehm\'e, A. R. Belu, E. Pantin, P., O Lagage, Y. Longval, A. C. H. Glasse, P. Bouchet, C. Cavarroc, D. Dubreuil,, S. Kendrew

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel high-resolution PSF measurement technique for JWST's MIRI instrument at 5.6 microns, confirming its optical performance and compliance with specifications through extensive cryogenic testing.
Contribution
It introduces an original microscanning and deconvolution method to over-resolve PSF images beyond native resolution, validated by flight model testing.
Findings
PSF FWHM matches simulations after correction.
Over 56% of energy within the first Airy ring.
MIRIM meets optical quality requirements.
Abstract
The Mid Infra Red Instrument (MIRI) is one of the four instruments onboard the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), providing imaging, coronagraphy and spectroscopy over the 5-28 microns band. To verify the optical performance of the instrument, extensive tests were performed at CEA on the flight model (FM) of the Mid-InfraRed IMager (MIRIM) at cryogenic temperatures and in the infrared. This paper reports on the point spread function (PSF) measurements at 5.6 microns, the shortest operating wavelength for imaging. At 5.6 microns the PSF is not Nyquist-sampled, so we use am original technique that combines a microscanning measurement strategy with a deconvolution algorithm to obtain an over-resolved MIRIM PSF. The microscanning consists in a sub-pixel scan of a point source on the focal plane. A data inversion method is used to reconstruct PSF images that are over-resolved by a factor of…
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