1. The Mid-Infrared Instrument for the James Webb Space Telescope, III: MIRIM, The MIRI Imager
- Author
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Bouchet, P., Garcia-Marin, M., Lagage, P. -O., Amiaux, J., Augueres, J. -L., Bauwens, E., Blommaert, J. A. D. L., Chen, C. H., Detre, O. H., Dicken, D., Dubreuil, D., Galdemard, Ph., Gastaud, R., Glasse, A., Gordon, K. D., Gougnaud, F., Guillard, P., Justtanont, K., Krause, O., Leboeuf, D., Longval, Y., Martin, L., Mazy, E., Moreau, V., Olofsson, G., Ray, T. P., Reess, J. -M., Renotte, E., Ressler, M. E., Ronayette, S., Salasca, S., Scheithauer, S., Sykes, J., Thelen, M. P., Wells, M., Wright, D., and Wright, G. S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
In this article, we describe the MIRI Imager module (MIRIM), which provides broad-band imaging in the 5 - 27 microns wavelength range for the James Webb Space Telescope. The imager has a 0"11 pixel scale and a total unobstructed view of 74"x113". The remainder of its nominal 113"x113" field is occupied by the coronagraphs and the low resolution spectrometer. We present the instrument optical and mechanical design. We show that the test data, as measured during the test campaigns undertaken at CEA-Saclay, at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, and at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, indicate that the instrument complies with its design requirements and goals. We also discuss the operational requirements (multiple dithers and exposures) needed for optimal scientific utilization of the MIRIM., Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures
- Published
- 2015
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