STIS offers the capability to perform spectroscopic observations with occulting bars located in the long slits, and imaging observations with occulting bars in the coronographic mask 50CORON
. Coronographic imaging is described in detail in Chapter 5.
The 52X0.2F1 aperture is the same physical slit as 52X0.2 with the target centered on the smaller of the two occulting bars (i.e., 0.5 arcseconds), instead of at the center of the 52X0.2 long slit. When this aperture is specified the slit wheel is rotated slightly to bring the bar into the center of the detector's field of view. This results in a tilt of 1.30o with respect to AXIS2 (i.e., the spatial axis perpendicular to the dispersion). Also, the full 52 arcseconds length of the long-slit field of view is decreased by about 20% for CCD spectroscopy.
This occulting bar is well suited to scientific programs conducting spectroscopy of faint extended material around a bright central source. Typical examples of such a program include QSO host galaxies, dynamics of jets in young stellar objects, and spectroscopy of resolved binaries. Observers performing barred spectroscopy should be sure to consult the section "Spectroscopic Mode Peculiarities" on page 360. Spectroscopic observations with the 0.5 arcsecond occulting bar are limited to first-order spectroscopic modes.
To simplify the use of the occulting bar, an aperture has been assigned for the occulting bar itself, as well as an aperture for the reference position located just off the bar. The reference aperture is used if the observer wishes to peakup the source in the slit, prior to offsetting to place the target behind the occulting bar. (Note that peakdowns behind the occulting bar, while possible in principle, are not recommended in practice).
The table below shows the complete set of aperture names and their application for the 0.5 arcsecond fiducial on the 52x0.2
slit. An example of an acquisition into the 52X0.2F1
aperture is provided in Chapter 8.
There are two important ramifications you should be aware of when using the 52X0.2F1 aperture: (1) ORIENT specification and (2) fringing correction.
Figure 12.7: A cartoon illustrating the 1.30º tilt of the 52X0.2F1 apertureThe ORIENT special requirement parameter is a specified position angle of the orientation reference vector U3, which is offset by 45o from the STIS detector spatial axis (AXIS2), in the direction North through East. Given a position angle on the sky of and taking into account the additional 1.30o offset for the 52X0.2F1 aperture:
ORIENT = + 46.30o or + 226.30o
For example, if we want to place the STIS 52X0.2F1 aperture along the jet of M87 (the example in Figure 11.10 on page 239 for a standard slit), we would do the following. Given a position angle of 110o on the sky:
ORIENT = 110o + 46.30o = 156.3o or ORIENT = 110o + 226.30o = 336.3o
The STIS CCD shows fringing for wavelengths longward of 7000 angstroms with the G750L and G750M gratings, limiting the signal-to-noise that can be obtained in these modes. The fringing is caused by interference of multiple reflections between the two surfaces of the CCD. (See Chapter 7 for details.) The recommended way to correct for fringing is by using contemporaneous fringe flats in conjunction with your science observations. A contemporaneous flat field exposure may be included in the Phase II template by using CCDFLAT as the target name. It is the observers' responsibility to include contemporaneous flat fields in their Phase II proposals.
In case of point-source spectra, contemporaneous fringe flats are normally taken using a short slit which is concentric with the long slit used for the science exposures. In the special case of the 52X0.2F1 aperture, however, we recommend obtaining long slit fringe flats to fully sample the PSF, since the spatial coverage of the short slit is only a few CCD pixels larger than that of the occulting bar of the 52X0.2F1 slit. A short slit fringe flat does give a somewhat better fringe correction for point sources than a long slit fringe flat so if you are additionally taking an unocculted image of your star with 52X0.2, we still recommend obtaining a short slit flat as well as a long slit flat to rectify that image.
Please refer to the Instrument Science Reports 97-15
(Revision A) for more details about near-IR fringe flats; 97-16
that deals with fringing in spectrograms of extended sources: 98-19
(Revision A) that deals with fringing in spectrograms of point sources and current fringing analysis, as well as details related to the 52X0.2F1 aperture; and 98-29
that is a tutorial on the use of IRAF tasks in the stsdas.hst_calib.stis package to remove fringing.
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