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The Mid-infrared Instrument for JWST and Its In-flight Performance

Authors :
Wright, Gillian S.
Rieke, George H.
Glasse, Alistair
Ressler, Michael
García Marín, Macarena
Aguilar, Jonathan
Alberts, Stacey
Álvarez-Márquez, Javier
Argyriou, Ioannis
Banks, Kimberly
Baudoz, Pierre
Boccaletti, Anthony
Bouchet, Patrice
Bouwman, Jeroen
Brandl, Bernard R.
Breda, David
Bright, Stacey
Cale, Steven
Colina, Luis
Cossou, Christophe
Coulais, Alain
Cracraft, Misty
De Meester, Wim
Dicken, Daniel
Engesser, Michael
Etxaluze, Mireya
Fox, Ori D.
Friedman, Scott
Fu, Henry
Gasman, Danny
Gáspár, András
Gastaud, René
Geers, Vincent
Glauser, Adrian Michael
Gordon, Karl D.
Greene, Thomas
Greve, Thomas R.
Grundy, Timothy
Güdel, Manuel
Guillard, Pierre
Haderlein, Peter
Hashimoto, Ryan
Henning, Thomas
Hines, Dean
Holler, Bryan
Detre, Örs Hunor
Jahromi, Amir
James, Bryan
Jones, Olivia C.
Justtanont, Kay
Kavanagh, Patrick
Kendrew, Sarah
Klaassen, Pamela
Krause, Oliver
Labiano, Alvaro
Lagage, Pierre-Olivier
Lambros, Scott
Larson, Kirsten
Law, David
Lee, David
Libralato, Mattia
Alverez, Jose Lorenzo
Meixner, Margaret
Morrison, Jane
Mueller, Migo
Murray, Katherine
Mycroft, Matthew
Myers, Richard
Nayak, Omnarayani
Naylor, Bret
Nickson, Bryony
Noriega-Crespo, Alberto
Östlin, Göran
O’Sullivan, Brian
Ottens, Richard
Patapis, Polychronis
Penanen, Konstantin
Pietraszkiewicz, Martin
Ray, Tom
Regan, Michael
Roteliuk, Anthony
Royer, Pierre
Samara-Ratna, Piyal
Samuelson, Bridget
Sargent, Beth A.
Scheithauer, Silvia
Schneider, Analyn
Schreiber, Jürgen
Shaughnessy, Bryan
Sheehan, Even
Shivaei, Irene
Sloan, G. C.
Tamas, Laszlo
Teague, Kelly
Temim, Tea
Tikkanen, Tuomo
Tustain, Samuel
van Dishoeck, Ewine F.
Vandenbussche, Bart
Weilert, Mark
Whitehouse, Paul
Wolff, Schuyler
Source :
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific; April 2023, Vol. 135 Issue: 1046 p048003-048003, 1p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) extends the reach of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to 28.5 μm. It provides subarcsecond-resolution imaging, high sensitivity coronagraphy, and spectroscopy at resolutions of λ/Δλ∼ 100–3500, with the high-resolution mode employing an integral field unit to provide spatial data cubes. The resulting broad suite of capabilities will enable huge advances in studies over this wavelength range. This overview describes the history of acquiring this capability for JWST. It discusses the basic attributes of the instrument optics, the detector arrays, and the cryocooler that keeps everything at approximately 7 K. It gives a short description of the data pipeline and of the instrument performance demonstrated during JWST commissioning. The bottom line is that the telescope and MIRI are both operating to the standards set by pre-launch predictions, and all of the MIRI capabilities are operating at, or even a bit better than, the level that had been expected. The paper is also designed to act as a roadmap to more detailed papers on different aspects of MIRI.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00046280 and 15383873
Volume :
135
Issue :
1046
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs62956869
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1538-3873/acbe66