Paper
12 July 2008 Fabrication and test of silicon grisms for JWST-NIRCam
D. T. Jaffe, W. Wang, J. P. Marsh, C. P. Deen, D. Kelly, T. P. Greene
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Abstract
We report on the design, fabrication, and evaluation of a set of silicon grisms for the NIRCam instrument on NASA's James Webb Space Telescope. The primary purpose of these devices is to aid in the alignment of JWST's deployable primary mirror. The grisms will also offer opportunities for slitless astronomical spectroscopy. The design of the grisms was driven by a need to fit into a constrained space, by a need for high resolving power across a broad spectral band, and by the need to survive the cosmic ray dosage to which the instrument will be subjected. The University of Texas Silicon Grating Laboratory is fabricating four identical grisms to cover 2.5-5 μm with a resolving power of 1770 at the blaze wavelength. There will be two grisms, with dispersion axes oriented at 90°, in each arm of the NIRCam long-wavelength camera. We pattern the gratings lithographically onto high resistivity float-zone silicon prisms following the recipe developed for the recently completed grism suite for the FORCAST camera on SOFIA. We discuss the design and production of the NIRCam devices and present the results of the optical testing of the grating surfaces showing that the devices will likely exceed their performance requirements.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
D. T. Jaffe, W. Wang, J. P. Marsh, C. P. Deen, D. Kelly, and T. P. Greene "Fabrication and test of silicon grisms for JWST-NIRCam", Proc. SPIE 7010, Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2008: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter, 70103L (12 July 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.788556
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Cited by 5 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Silicon

James Webb Space Telescope

Optical fabrication

Spectral resolution

Diffraction gratings

Cameras

Reflection

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