|
|
| Note : Especially
when preparing observations for the IRS, it is very important to read the
IRS chapter in the Spitzer Observer's
Manual. Information not duplicated on the web pages can be found
there! |
Additional important observation planning advice and information is
available throughout the IRS SOM chapter. For example, we recommend that
observers pay careful attention to all material that is presented in bold
font or (especially) material that is enclosed in text boxes. The
latter usually summarizes in one or two sentences an important aspect of
IRS observation planning that is described at length in the surrounding
text (see SOM index under IRS: boxed item for a list of page numbers).
In addition, the following list of highlights includes references to SOM
sections.
The basic characteristics of the spectrograph are summarized in the IRS Pocket Guide,
available from the SSC website. They are also available in SOM Table 7.1,
Table 7.2, Table 7.5, and Figure 7.6. Assessing this information in light
of your science goals should be the first step in determining whether to
propose to use the IRS.
Updates 24 Jan 06:
- Peak-Up Accuracy
- Observers should be mindful of their required photometric precision,
which will translate into peak-up accuracy. In general, high-accuracy
peak-ups are not much more expensive than others and produce better
results (spectroscopic repeatability of 1 sigma=2 to 5%), but medium
accuracy peak-ups are appropriate for working with the wide slits (LL and
LH). Low accuracy peak-up should not be used. See section 7.2.4.
- Peak-Up Acquisition Targets
- The
observer should ensure that he/she has picked up an isolated point source
(no objects within 60" × 80") within 30' of the target by checking the
MSX, 2MASS, and/or DSS images. The source should have a flux density
within 5 mJy and 150 mJy in the blue or 15 mJy and 340 mJy in the red,
with the exact minimum value depending on the local background level. This
value should be entered correctly in Spot, as the peak-up source will be
rejected if the observed flux is discrepant from the predicted flux by a
factor larger than 5. The observer should take care to enter the epoch
(the year for which the position was obtained), not to be confused with
the equinox (which determines the actual coordinate system used) of the
coordinates and the stellar proper motion. The later should be given in
arcsec/year. Note that peak-up stars from the 2MASS catalog do not include
proper motion information, and that proper motions in the PCRS are in
milliarcseconds per year. See section 7.2.4.4.
- Redundancy
- The observer should
ensure that he/she has at least two cycles for each observation this
will provide greater redundancy for cosmic ray hits and rogue pixel
identification. For example, rather than having 1 cycle x 480s, the
observer should choose 4 x 120s.
- Spectroscopic Saturation
- A-to-D saturation limits for the low resolution modules are ~5 Jy (10
Jy) at 10 microns (25 microns). For the high resolution modules, the
limits are 60 Jy (70 Jy) at 12 microns (25 microns). This means that in
the shortest possible observation (6 sec), at least one of the samples
will be saturated. Given the characteristics of the SSC pipeline,
saturation is not necessarily fatal although it will result in less
signal-tonoise than expected. The observer should decide whether or not
the loss of signal-to-noise in certain regions of the spectrum is
compensated by a better exposure elsewhere. See Section 7.2.1.2.
- Imaging Saturation
- For the shortest exposure times, in low background, point sources
brighter than 0.19 Jy at 16 microns will saturate the blue peakup image.
Point sources brighter than 0.42 Jy at 22 microns will saturate the red
one. Extended sources brighter than 450 MJy/sr for both the blue and red
will saturate the detector in the shortest available ramps. As in
spectroscopy, source saturation is not necessarily fatal, as the image
flux can usually be recovered. See Section 7.2.3.4.5.1.
- Sensitivity
- FIn order to estimate the feasibility of his/her observations,
the observer should use the sensitivity calculator available on the SSC
website. Observers should be aware, however, that this calculator does not
include any noise introduced by the extraction. It assumes perfect
extractions with perfectly centered sources unaffected by rogues or
fringing. These are very idealized conditions and observers should design
their observations with generous signal-to-noise margins. See Section
7.2.2.
- SL Observations
- For the SL observations, the observer should check that there are no
bright sources in the PU field of view. Since the same array is used for
the PU and SL spectra, saturation on the PU FOV may introduce artifacts
into your spectrum. See Section 7.2.5.1.
- Sky Observations, high resolution
- For the LH module, the SSC strongly recommends that the observer plan
for sky background observations close in time to the primary observation
for sources fainter than 2 Jy at 25 microns. Sky subtraction will
significantly reduce the impact of the rogue pixels in the
signal-to-noise. For the SH module, sky subtraction is recommended if
accurate flux calibration is needed. The sky observations for the high
resolution modules should be observations of nearby empty fields, as
extracting sky measurements from within the target observations is almost
impossible with the high-res slits. See Section 7.2.5.2.
- Sky Observations, low resolution
- The sky can be subtracted using the two nod positions or observations
in which the target is in the other slit in the detector. The latter are
possible because the observer automatically gets "off-slit" background
measurements for (for example) order 2 when observing in order 1. If using
off-slit sky observations, the observer should make sure that the off-slit
regions are not contaminated by a bright source or extended nebulosity in
the field of view. Also, the off-slit sky is only useful if the two orders
have the same exposure time. Off-slit sky measurements may also be less
accurate than nod-sky measurements, if separated by long times or if there
is a large gradient in sky background. Observers interested in extended
sources will need to assess whether or not these procedures are acceptable
for their goals. If not, dedicated sky observations of empty fields will
likely be necessary. See Section 7.2.5.2.
- Spectrophotometric Calibration
- The SSC provides the observer with photometrically calibrated
products. The absolute photometric accuracy of point source spectra is
limited by the accuracy of the models used for calibration and currently
stands at ~10%. Representative slope deviations from the beginning to the
end of an order with respect to point source models are 7% for the high
resolution modules and 3% for the low resolution ones. Residual features
in the flats produce systematic residual artifacts of 2 to 3%, which may
affect detection of faint spectral lines. See Section
7.3.4.6.
- High-Res resolution
- Unresolved spectral lines are only Nyquist-sampled at the longest
wavelength ranges in each module. If using the high resolution modules,
the observer should understand that this will result in errors in the
measured line widths. Observers should be careful when interpreting lines
with R>~400 as resolved. See Section 7.1.6.
Really, check the IRS chapter in the Spitzer Observer's Manual. We mean it.
| Note : Especially
when preparing observations for the IRS, it is very important to read the
IRS chapter in the Spitzer Observer's
Manual. Information not duplicated on the web pages can be found
there! |
Go back to IRS page
|