Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published October 2007 | Published
Journal Article Open

Spectral Mapping Reconstruction of Extended Sources

Abstract

Three‐dimensional spectroscopy of extended sources is typically performed with dedicated integral field spectrographs. We describe a method of reconstructing full spectral cubes, with two spatial and one spectral dimension, from rastered spectral mapping observations employing a single slit in a traditional slit spectrograph. When the background and image characteristics are stable, as is often achieved in space, the use of traditional long slits for integral field spectroscopy can substantially reduce instrument complexity over dedicated integral field designs, without loss of mapping efficiency—particularly compelling when a long‐slit mode for single unresolved source follow‐up is separately required. We detail a custom flux‐conserving cube reconstruction algorithm, discuss issues of extended‐source flux calibration, and describe CUBISM, a tool that implements these methods for spectral maps obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope's Infrared Spectrograph.

Additional Information

© 2007 The Astronomical Society of the Pacific. Received 2007 June 5; accepted 2007 August 21; published 2007 October 25. The authors thank the staff of the IRS instrument support team at the Spitzer Science Center, California Institute of Technology— with special thanks to Phil Appleton, Carl Grillmair, David Shupe, Pat Morris, Sergio Fajardo-Acosta, Patrick Ogle, Jim Ingalls, Harry Teplitz, and Patrick Ogle—for substantial continuing support and advice regarding all aspects of telescope control, instrument calibration, pipeline behavior, and more. We are also indebted to the IRS instrument team at Cornell University—in particular Jim Houck, Vassilis Charmandaris, Jeff Van Cleve, Keven Uchida, Greg Sloan, Sarah Higdon, and Daniel Devost—for much helpful advice, discussions, calibration assistance, and insight into the instrument. Michael Cushing provided helpful discussions regarding aspects of the algorithm design. Support for this work, part of the Spitzer Space Telescope Legacy Science Program, was provided by NASA through contract 1224769 issued by JPL/Caltech under contract 1407.

Attached Files

Published - SMIpasp07.pdf

Files

SMIpasp07.pdf
Files (631.7 kB)
Name Size Download all
md5:dad1d6b1ef9ed2dbb740c65f38c5ee3c
631.7 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 19, 2023