The near infrared airglow continuum conundrum. Constraints for ground-based faint object spectroscopy
J. K. M. Viuho (1,2,3,4) J. P. U. Fynbo (1,2), M. I. Andersen (1,2) ((1) Cosmic Dawn Center (DAWN), (2) Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Jagtvej 155A, DK-2200, Copenhagen N, Denmark, (3) Nordic Optical Telescope, Rambla Jose Ana Fernandez Perez 7

TL;DR
This study measures the faint near-infrared airglow continuum at a major observatory, providing constraints crucial for ground-based faint object spectroscopy and addressing the challenge of atmospheric emission interference.
Contribution
It offers the first unbiased, high-resolution measurements of the near-infrared airglow continuum at the Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos, minimizing instrumental scattering effects.
Findings
Measured zenith airglow continuum at 6720Å as 22.5 mag/arcsec²
Set upper limits at 7700Å and 10500Å due to observational constraints
Results are consistent with other major observatories' data
Abstract
The airglow continuum in the near infrared is a challenge to quantify due to its faintness, and the grating scattered light from atmospheric hydroxyl (OH) emission lines. Despite its faintness, the airglow continuum sets the fundamental limits for ground-based spectroscopy of faint targets, and makes the difference between ground and space-based observation in the interline regions between atmospheric emission lines. We aim to quantify the level of airglow continuum radiance in the VIS -- NIR wavelength range observable with silicon photodetectors for the site Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos in a way that our measurement will not be biased by the grating scattered light. We aim to do this by measuring the airglow continuum radiance with a minimal and controlled contamination from the broad instrumental scattering wings caused by the bright atmospheric OH lines. We measure the…
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