The nature of point source fringes in mid-infrared spectra acquired with the James Webb Space Telescope
Ioannis Argyriou (1), Martyn Wells (2), Alistair Glasse (2), David Lee, (2), Pierre Royer (1), Bart Vandenbussche (1), Eliot Malumuth (3), Adrian, Glauser (4), Patrick J. Kavanagh (5), Alvaro Labiano (6), Fred Lahuis (7),, Michael Mueller (8, 7)

TL;DR
This study investigates the behavior of point source fringes in JWST MIRI spectra, identifying pixel illumination as a key factor, and demonstrates that correction improves spectral accuracy and sensitivity.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed analysis of point source fringe variations and introduces a correction method that enhances spectral data quality in JWST MIRI observations.
Findings
Fringe amplitude and phase vary systematically with wavelength and field position.
Pixel illumination non-uniformity causes systematic fringe variations.
Correction reduces spectral continuum standard deviation by 50%.
Abstract
The constructive and destructive interference in different layers of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) detector arrays modulate the detected signal as a function of wavelength. Additionally, sources of different spatial profiles show different fringe patterns. Dividing by a static fringe flat could hamper the scientific interpretation of sources whose fringes do not match that of the fringe flat. We find point source fringes measured by the MIRI Medium-Resolution Spectrometer (MRS) to be reproducible under similar observing conditions. We want, thus, to identify the variables, if they exist, that would allow for a parametrization of the signal variations induced by point source fringe modulations. We do this by analyzing MRS detector plane images acquired on the ground. We extracted the fringe profile of multiple point source observations and studied…
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