The ArT\'eMiS wide-field submillimeter camera: preliminary on-sky performances at 350 microns
Vincent Reveret, Philippe Andr\'e, Jean Le Pennec, Michel Talvard,, Patrick Agn\`ese, Agn\`es Arnaud, Laurent Clerc, Carlos de Breuck,, Jean-Charles Cigna, Cyrille Delisle, Eric Doumayrou, Lionel Duband, Didier, Dubreuil, Luc Dumaye, Eric Ercolani, Pascal Gallais, Elodie Groult

TL;DR
The ArTeMiS camera is a wide-field submillimeter instrument operating at 200, 350, and 450 microns, successfully tested on APEX, showing improved mapping speed and promising preliminary performance metrics.
Contribution
This paper presents the design, development, and initial on-sky performance results of the ArTeMiS wide-field submillimeter camera at 350 microns, including calibration and pointing accuracy.
Findings
Mapping speed more than 5 times better than previous instrument
Median NEFD at 350 microns is 600 mJy.s^{1/2}
Beam size at 350 microns is 8.5 arcsec
Abstract
ArTeMiS is a wide-field submillimeter camera operating at three wavelengths simultaneously (200, 350 and 450 microns). A preliminary version of the instrument equipped with the 350 microns focal plane, has been successfully installed and tested on APEX telescope in Chile during the 2013 and 2014 austral winters. This instrument is developed by CEA (Saclay and Grenoble, France), IAS (France) and University of Manchester (UK) in collaboration with ESO. We introduce the mechanical and optical design, as well as the cryogenics and electronics of the ArTeMiS camera. ArTeMiS detectors are similar to the ones developed for the Herschel PACS photometer but they are adapted to the high optical load encountered at APEX site. Ultimately, ArTeMiS will contain 4 sub-arrays at 200 microns and 2x8 sub-arrays at 350 and 450 microns. We show preliminary lab measurements like the responsivity of the…
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