TL;DR
This paper evaluates the spectral resolving capabilities of Arrayed Waveguide Gratings (AWGs) for exoplanet atmospheric studies, demonstrating their potential for miniaturized, high-resolution astronomical spectroscopy.
Contribution
It introduces a publicly-available tool for analyzing AWG performance and provides detailed characterization of their spectral response and resolution capabilities for exoplanet spectroscopy.
Findings
LSF has minimal wavelength dependence (~5%)
FWHM scales linearly with emission line width
Continuous AWGs can achieve ~2x higher resolution than discrete AWGs
Abstract
Photonic spectrographs offer a highly miniaturized, flexible, and stable on-chip solution for astronomical spectroscopy and can be used for various science cases such as determining the atmospheric composition of exoplanets to understand their habitability, formation, and evolution. Arrayed Waveguide Gratings (AWGs) have shown the best promise to be used as an astrophotonic spectrograph. We developed a publically-available tool to conduct a preliminary examination of the capability of the AWGs in spectrally resolving exoplanet atmospheres. We derived the Line-Spread-Function (LSF) as a function of wavelength and the Full-Width-at-Half-Maximum (FWHM) of the LSF as a function of spectral line width to evaluate the response of a discretely- and continuously-sampled low-resolution AWG (R 1000). We observed that the LSF has minimal wavelength dependence (5\%), irrespective of…
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