Performance of Silicon immersed gratings: Measurement, analysis and modelling
Michiel Rodenhuis, Paul J. J. Tol, Tonny H. M. Coppens, Phillip P., Laubert, Aaldert H. van Amerongen

TL;DR
This paper discusses the design, manufacturing, and measurement of silicon immersed gratings for space and ground-based spectrographs, demonstrating optimized performance meeting stringent requirements for infrared applications.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive methodology for optimizing and measuring immersed grating performance, with practical examples from space and ground instruments.
Findings
Performance requirements were successfully met with some margin.
Measurement methods effectively evaluated efficiency, scattered light, and wavefront error.
Design and manufacturing processes can be optimized for high-performance immersed gratings.
Abstract
The use of Immersed Gratings offers advantages for both space- and ground-based spectrographs. As diffraction takes place inside the high-index medium, the optical path difference and angular dispersion are boosted proportionally, thereby allowing a smaller grating area and a smaller spectrometer size. Short-wave infrared (SWIR) spectroscopy is used in space-based monitoring of greenhouse and pollution gases in the Earth atmosphere. On the extremely large telescopes currently under development, mid-infrared high-resolution spectrographs will, among other things, be used to characterize exo-planet atmospheres. At infrared wavelengths, Silicon is transparent. This means that production methods used in the semiconductor industry can be applied to the fabrication of immersed gratings. Using such methods, we have designed and built immersed gratings for both space- and ground-based…
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