MIRI The Mid-Infrared Instrument for the JWST. ESO, Garching 13 th April 2010 Alistair Glasse (MIRI Instrument Scientist)

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Transcription:

MIRI The Mid-Infrared Instrument for the JWST ESO, Garching 13 th April 2010 Alistair Glasse (MIRI Instrument Scientist) 1

Summary MIRI overview, status and vital statistics. Sensitivity, saturation and sub-arrays. Special operating modes MIRI flight hardware 2

MIRI A 5 to 28 µm imager and spectrometer Flight model systems now being delivered to RAL for integration and testing (late 2010) Delivery to NASA/GSFC in 2011 JWST Launch in 2014 Mission Lifetime 3-5 years minimum - 10 years goal Built by a consortium of European Institutes - Plus JPL for the three 1024 x 1024 pixel Si:As IBC detectors MIRI VERIFICATION MODEL RAL, July 07

The MIRI European Consortium UK-ATC Principal Investigator Optical Engineering Spectrometer Pre-Optics (SPO) Calibration Sources U. of Stockholm Filters and Dichroics Astrium Ltd. Consortium Management PA Coordination System Engineering U. of Leicester Mechanical Engineering Primary Structure MGSE RAL Thermal Engineering & Hardware Optical Bench Assembly AIV DSRI Hexapod DIAS Filters NOVA-ASTRON Spectrometer Main Optics (SMO) CSL Input, Optics & Calibration (IOC) Instrument Control Electronics (ICE) Imager Mirrors U. of Leuven EGSE Software Support CEA Imager LESIA/LAM Coronagraph U. Leiden Spectroscopy Analysis MPIA Heidelberg Electrical Engineering Cryo Mechanisms U. of Köln Low Resolution Spectrometer Double Prism INTA MIRI Telescope Simulator (MTS) PSI Contamination Control Cover Cryo Harness 4 NASA/GSFC JWST Project Office Spacecraft Integrated Science Instrument Module (ISIM) JPL Detector System Flight Software Cryo-Cooler Univ Arizona Quick-look pipeline ESA/ESTEC JWST Project Office Prodex Office

MIRI Layout A carbon fibre truss isolates 7 K MIRI optics from the 40 K telescope Light enters from the JWST telescope A 10 x 10 arcsec field passes through the deck into the R ~ 3000, 4 channel integral field spectrometer 2 detectors 2 channels per detector For λ = 10 µm FWHM, 0.32 arcsec 1 st Dark ring diameter, 0.74 arcsec 5 MIRI VM RAL A 115 x 115 arcsec region of the focal plane is directed into the imager 10 bandpass filters 4 coronagraphs R ~ 100 slit spectrometer.

The MIRI Focal Planes (Entrance + Detector) Imager 75 x 113 arcsec field 0.11 arcseconds/pixel Nyquist sampled at 7 µm It is not possible to simultaneously observe the same field with imager and spectrometer Low Resolution Spectrometer 5 x 0.6 arcsec Three 4QPM Coronagraphs 24 x 24 arcsec Lyot Mask 23µm 30 x 30 R ~ 3000, 4 Channel Integral Field Spectrometer 1 arcminute MIRI VM Spectral Image Specsim simulated image MIRI FM Imager (nonflight detector fitted) 6.7 10.2 15.7 24.5 λ/ µm λ/ µm λ/ µm 5.6 6 8.6 13.3 20.5

MIRI Imager Filters F2100W F560W F1800W Lens F1500W F2300C P750L F1280W F770W F1130W F1550C F1000W F2550W BLANK F1140C F2550WR FND F1065C CEA Saclay + MPIA Filter name (and wavelength) Pass band Δλ (µm) F560W 1.2 F770W 2.2 F1000W 2.0 F1130W 0.7 F1280W 2.4 F1500W 3.0 F1800W 3.0 F2100W 5.0 F2550W 4.0 F2550WR 4.0 Function Imaging P750L 5 R ~ 100 Spectroscopy F1065C 0.53 F1140C 0.57 F1550C 0.78 F2300C 4.6 Coronagraphy FND 10 Target Acquisition FLENS N/A Alignment BLANK N/A Calibration

FM Estimated Photon Conversion Efficiency Instrument throughput, decreases from short to long wavelengths Still some uncertainty in MRS Spectral Resolving Power 0.5 Imaging Filters 0.25 Medium Resolution Spectroscopy 0.4 0.20 PCE [el/photon] 0.3 0.2 PCE [el/photon] 0.15 0.1 0.10 0.0 10 20 30 Wavelength [µm] 0.05 10 20 30 Wavelength [µm] 8

The JWST Infrared Environment Photon background increases by > x1000 from short to long wavelengths. - Zodiacal dust - Straylight from Sun/Earth/etc. - Telescope thermal emission Cosmic ray flux expected to disturb > 50 % of pixels every 1000 seconds Flux [MJy / steradian] 10000 1000 100 10 1 0.1 4 10 20 30 Wavelength [µm] Aim to achieve shot noise limited sensitivity at all wavelengths and SRPs Need to make optimum use of detector 9

Detector Readout Patterns charge integration t frame frame = 1 2 3.. n frames FAST Bright and extended objects (plus sub-arrays), Long wavelength imaging) SLOW Faint Objects, Deep Imaging, MRS Spectroscopy t frame [secs] n frames 2.7 1 to 40 27.6 1 to 40 time Aim to fill the pixel capacitance 10 - measure plenty of frames to beat down the effective read noise. SLOW mode averages 8 samples per frame to reduce the read noise - t frame is the minimum integration time. (No true dark) Can estimate the sensitivity for these basic readout patterns

Sensitivity estimate Sample photocurrent with model detector (+ photometric aperture, FM estimated PCE, read noise, and FULL frame readout pattern). S/N = 10 in 10,000 second exposure for a faint point source 100 10 σ 10,000 sec (microjansky) 100 10 σ 10,000 sec (x 10-20 W m -2 ) 10 10 1 1 0.1 0.1 4 10 20 30 4 10 20 30 Wavelength [µm] Wavelength [µm] Very sensitive, but finite detector dynamic range means that MIRI will saturate on targets which are faint on 8 m ground-based telescopes. 11

Target flux sensitivity limits Target noise dominates for target photocurrent > background + dark Saturation (1/8 th of flux in brightest pixel at 8 microns, 80,000 el (1/3 rd full well), FAST mode, FULL frame sub-array) Spectrometer 1000 Jy 10 Jy Imager + LRS Saturation 100 Jy 10 Jy 1 Jy Saturation 1 Jy Target flux [mjy] 100 mjy 10 mjy 1 mjy 100 µjy Target noise dominated limit Target noise dominated limit 100 mjy 10 mjy 1 mjy 100 µjy 10 µjy 10 µjy 12 1 µjy 4 10 20 30 4 10 20 30 Wavelength [µm] Wavelength [µm] 1 µjy

Imager Readout Patterns Extend the saturation limit using sub-arrays to trade field of view for faster frame rates. - For example, a 0.5 Jy source will not saturate the F1000W filter using the SUB128 subarray with its 14 x 14 arcsecond field. - Note the SLITLESSPRISM sub-array s specific capability for transit spectroscopy. SUB-ARRAY FAST frame time sec SLOW mode frame time sec FULL 2.775 27.105 BRIGHTSKY 1.183 11.274 Purpose Full frame imaging + nominal LRS spectroscopy Imaging at 2.3 x FULL frame saturation limit SUB256 0.453 4.024 6.1 x FULL frame saturation SUB128 0.100 0.515 28 x FULL frame saturation SUB64 0.065 0.180 40 x FULL frame saturation 13 MASK1065 0.228 1.772 MASK1140 0.228 1.772 MASK1550 0.228 1.772 Coronagraphy MASKLYOT 0.228 1.772 SLITLESSPRISM 0.164 1.430 Slitless LRS spectroscopy

Sub-arrays and exoplanet imaging Modelling sub-array impact on S/N for exoplanet parent star imaging. (Christine Chen, STSci) F560W F2550W Proposal (Anthony Boccaletti, Meudon) to use Lyot bar for > 10 5 contrast using short wavelength filters. 23 µm PSF ~ 10 µm PSF 14 See Eric Pantin s talk for more about coronagraphy with MIRI.

Low Resolution Spectrometer Slit and slitless locations - Cusp at 5 µm in slitless spectra - Possible alternate slitless location (currently unsupported) Continuum sensitivity - ~3 microjansky 10 σ 10000 sec at 7.5 µm Spectral Resolving Power CEA Saclay FM Measurement (Ronayette, Nehme, Belu, Kendrew) 9 µm 5 µm 9 µm 13 µm 7.0 µm 8.0 µm Telluric 15

MIRI Medium Resolution Spectrometer 4 Spectral Channels with concentric fields of view 3 mechanism selected sub-spectra per channel with dedicated dichroic and gratings Channel 1 2 3 4 Instantaneous sub-spectrum A B Channel Name 16 Spatial sample dimensions Across slice (Slice width) [arcsec] Along slice (Pixel) [arcsec] Instantaneous FOV Across slice [arcsec] Along slice [arcsec] 1 0.18 0.20 3.7 (21) 3.7 2 0.28 0.20 4.5 (17) 4.7 3 0.39 0.25 6.1 (16) 6.2 4 0.64 0.27 7.9 (12) 7.7 C 5 10 15 20 25 30 Wavelength [µm]

MIRI MRS Flight Hardware The SPO Spectrometer Pre-Optics Separates the 4 spectral channels x 3 sub-spectra using 9 dichroics mounted in 2 mechanisms. 4 IFUs image slice the fields and present them to the spectrometer cameras. Spectra dispersed using 12 diffraction gratings. Pupil and field filtering provided throughout for straylight control. 17

18 Spectral Filtering by Dichroic Chain

Grating Wheels Astron, Netherlands MPIA, Germany UKATC, Scotland 19