The Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) on the James Webb Space Telescope II. Multi-object spectroscopy (MOS)
P. Ferruit, P. Jakobsen, G. Giardino, T. Rawle, C. Alves de Oliveira,, S. Arribas, T. L. Beck, S. Birkmann, T. B\"oker, A. J. Bunker, S. Charlot, G., de Marchi, M. Franx, A. Henry, D. Karakla, S. A. Kassin, N. Kumari, M., L\'opez-Caniego, N. L\"utzgendorf, R. Maiolino

TL;DR
NIRSpec on JWST's MOS mode employs a novel Micro Shutter Array to enable simultaneous observation of 50-200 objects, offering unprecedented multiplexing and sensitivity for infrared spectroscopy in space.
Contribution
This paper introduces the first configurable multi-object spectrograph on a space mission, detailing its capabilities, design constraints, and data calibration methods.
Findings
Able to observe 50-200 objects simultaneously
Provides near-infrared spectra from 0.6 to 5.3 μm
Achieves unprecedented multiplexing and sensitivity
Abstract
We provide an overview of the capabilities and performance of the Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) when used in its multi-object spectroscopy (MOS) mode employing a novel Micro Shutter Array (MSA) slit device. The MSA consists of four separate 98 arcsec 91 arcsec quadrants each containing individually addressable shutters whose open areas on the sky measure 0.20 arcsec 0.46 arcsec on a 0.27 arcsec 0.53 arcsec pitch. This is the first time that a configurable multi-object spectrograph has been available on a space mission. The levels of multiplexing achievable with NIRSpec MOS mode are quantified and we show that NIRSpec will be able to observe typically fifty to two hundred objects simultaneously with the pattern of close to a quarter of a million shutters provided by the MSA. This pattern is fixed…
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.
