The infrared imaging spectrograph (IRIS) for TMT: sensitivities and simulations
Shelley A. Wright, Elizabeth J. Barton, James E. Larkin, Anna M., Moore, David Crampton, Luc Simard, IRIS team

TL;DR
This paper estimates the sensitivities of the IRIS spectrograph on the TMT, demonstrating its unprecedented capabilities for studying faint astronomical sources and high-redshift galaxies with high resolution and sensitivity.
Contribution
It provides detailed sensitivity estimates and simulations for IRIS, highlighting its potential to advance high-redshift galaxy studies and early universe galaxy formation research.
Findings
IRIS can perform 3% photometry on 26-29 mag sources in 5 hours.
IRIS achieves good S/N on 22-26 mag sources with R=4000 in 5 hours.
Simulated data show IRIS's potential to study galaxy dynamics and chemical abundances at high redshift.
Abstract
We present sensitivity estimates for point and resolved astronomical sources for the current design of the InfraRed Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) on the future Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT). IRIS, with TMT's adaptive optics system, will achieve unprecedented point source sensitivities in the near-infrared (0.84 - 2.45 {\mu}m) when compared to systems on current 8-10m ground based telescopes. The IRIS imager, in 5 hours of total integration, will be able to perform a few percent photometry on 26 - 29 magnitude (AB) point sources in the near-infrared broadband filters (Z, Y, J, H, K). The integral field spectrograph, with a range of scales and filters, will achieve good signal-to-noise on 22 - 26 magnitude (AB) point sources with a spectral resolution of R=4,000 in 5 hours of total integration time. We also present simulated 3D IRIS data of resolved high-redshift star forming galaxies (1 < z…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
