JWST MIRI flight performance: The Medium-Resolution Spectrometer
Abstract
The Medium-Resolution Spectrometer (MRS) provides one of the four operating modes of the Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) on board the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). The MRS is an integral field spectrometer, measuring the spatial and spectral distributions of light across the 5-28 wavelength range with a spectral resolving power between 3700-1300. We present the MRS's optical, spectral, and spectro-photometric performance, as achieved in flight, and we report on the effects that limit the instrument's ultimate sensitivity. The MRS flight performance has been quantified using observations of stars, planetary nebulae, and planets in our Solar System. The precision and accuracy of this calibration was checked against celestial calibrators with well-known flux levels and spectral features. We find that the MRS geometric calibration has a distortion solution accuracy relative to the commanded position of 8 mas at 5 and 23 mas at 28 . The wavelength calibration is accurate to within 9 km/sec at 5 and 27 km/sec at 28 . The uncertainty in the absolute spectro-photometric calibration accuracy was estimated at 5.6 +- 0.7 %. The MIRI calibration pipeline is able to suppress the amplitude of spectral fringes to below 1.5 % for both extended and point sources across the entire wavelength range. The MRS point spread function (PSF) is 60 % broader than the diffraction limit along its long axis at 5 and is 15 % broader at 28 . The MRS flight performance is found to be better than prelaunch expectations. The MRS is one of the most subscribed observing modes of JWST and is yielding many high-profile publications. It is currently humanity's most powerful instrument for measuring the mid-infrared spectra of celestial sources and is expected to continue as such for many years to come.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2303.13469,
title = {JWST MIRI flight performance: The Medium-Resolution Spectrometer},
author = {Ioannis Argyriou and Alistair Glasse and David R. Law and Alvaro Labiano and Javier Álvarez-Márquez and Polychronis Patapis and Patrick J. Kavanagh and Danny Gasman and Michael Mueller and Kirsten Larson and Bart Vandenbussche and Adrian M. Glauser and Pierre Royer and Daniel Dicken and Jake Harkett and Beth A. Sargent and Michael Engesser and Olivia C. Jones and Sarah Kendrew and Alberto Noriega-Crespo and Bernhard Brandl and George H. Rieke and Gillian S. Wright and David Lee and Martyn Wells},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2303.13469},
year = {2023}
}
Comments
16 pages, 21 figures