Euclid. III. The NISP Instrument
Euclid Collaboration: K. Jahnke (1), W. Gillard (2), M. Schirmer (1),, A. Ealet (3), T. Maciaszek (4), E. Prieto (5), R. Barbier (3), C. Bonoli (6),, L. Corcione (7), S. Dusini (8), F. Grupp (9, 10), F. Hormuth (11, 1),, S. Ligori (7), L. Martin (5), G. Morgante (12)

TL;DR
The Euclid NISP instrument is a state-of-the-art near-infrared spectrometer and photometer designed for large-scale extragalactic surveys, providing high-quality imaging and spectroscopy over a wide field to study billions of galaxies.
Contribution
This paper details the design, calibration, and capabilities of the NISP instrument, highlighting its advanced features and its role in the Euclid mission's large-scale galaxy survey.
Findings
NISP achieves a limiting magnitude of ~24.5AB mag in photometry.
Spectroscopic sensitivity allows detection of emission lines with flux ~2x10^-16 erg/s/cm^2.
Calibration procedures ensure photometric accuracy better than 1.5%.
Abstract
The Near-Infrared Spectrometer and Photometer (NISP) on board the Euclid satellite provides multiband photometry and R>=450 slitless grism spectroscopy in the 950-2020nm wavelength range. In this reference article we illuminate the background of NISP's functional and calibration requirements, describe the instrument's integral components, and provide all its key properties. We also sketch the processes needed to understand how NISP operates and is calibrated, and its technical potentials and limitations. Links to articles providing more details and technical background are included. NISP's 16 HAWAII-2RG (H2RG) detectors with a plate scale of 0.3" pix^-1 deliver a field-of-view of 0.57deg^2. In photo mode, NISP reaches a limiting magnitude of ~24.5AB mag in three photometric exposures of about 100s exposure time, for point sources and with a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of 5. For…
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