How dark the sky: the JWST backgrounds
Jane R. Rigby (NASA Goddard), Paul A. Lightsey (Ball Aerospace,, retired), Macarena Garc\'ia Mar\'in (ESA), Charles W. Bowers (NASA Goddard),, Erin C. Smith (NASA Goddard), Alistair Glasse (UK Astronomy Technology, Centre), Michael W. McElwain (NASA Goddard)

TL;DR
This paper reports on the measured backgrounds affecting JWST observations, showing they meet predictions and are primarily limited by astrophysical sources, enabling high-quality deep imaging in the infrared.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive measurement and analysis of JWST backgrounds, confirming they meet design expectations and assessing their impact on science performance.
Findings
Background levels meet prelaunch predictions.
Astrophysical backgrounds dominate over stray light and thermal emission.
JWST's sensitivity and imaging capabilities are as expected or better.
Abstract
We describe the sources of stray light and thermal background that affect JWST observations, report actual backgrounds as measured from commissioning and early-science observations, compare these background levels to prelaunch predictions, estimate the impact of the backgrounds on science performance, and explore how the backgrounds probe the achieved configuration of the deployed observatory. We find that for almost all applications, the observatory is limited by the irreducible astrophysical backgrounds, rather than scattered stray light and thermal self-emission, for all wavelengths lambda < 12.5 micron, thus meeting the level 1 requirement. This result was not assured given the open architecture and thermal challenges of JWST, and it is the result of meticulous attention to stray light and thermal issues in the design, construction, integration, and test phases. From background…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Calibration and Measurement Techniques
