The InfraRed Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) for TMT: Reflective ruled diffraction grating performance testing and discussion
Elliot Meyer, Shaojie Chen, Shelley A. Wright, Anna M. Moore, James E., Larkin, Luc Simard, Jerome Maire, Etsuko Mieda, Jacob Gordon

TL;DR
This study evaluates the efficiency of reflective ruled diffraction gratings for the IRIS spectrograph on TMT, comparing their performance across different bands, polarization states, and vendor specifications.
Contribution
It provides detailed efficiency measurements of five ruled gratings for IRIS, including polarization effects and comparison with VPH gratings, advancing grating selection for TMT.
Findings
Peak efficiencies up to 98.9% for H-band TM polarization.
Minimal incident angle dependency within ±3°.
Polarization state affects efficiency by 10-20%.
Abstract
We present the efficiency of near-infrared reflective ruled diffraction gratings designed for the InfraRed Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS). IRIS is a first light, integral field spectrograph and imager for the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) and narrow field infrared adaptive optics system (NFIRAOS). We present our experimental setup and analysis of the efficiency of selected reflective diffraction gratings. These measurements are used as a comparison sample against selected candidate Volume Phase Holographic (VPH) gratings (see Chen et al., this conference). We investigate the efficiencies of five ruled gratings designed for IRIS from two separate vendors. Three of the gratings accept a bandpass of 1.19-1.37 {\mu}m (J band) with ideal spectral resolutions of R=4000 and R=8000, groove densities of 249 and 516 lines/mm, and blaze angles of 9.86 and 20.54 degrees, respectively. The other two…
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