Observing with the ISO Short-Wavelength Spectrometer

Th. de Graauw - L.N. Haser - D.A. Beintema - P.R. Roelfsema - H. van Agthoven - L. Barl - O.H. Bauer - H.E.G. Bekenkamp - A-J. Boonstra - D.R. Boxhoorn - J. Coté - P. de Groene - C. van Dijkhuizen - S. Drapatz - J. Evers - H. Feuchtgruber - M. Frericks - R. Genzel - G. Haerendel - A.M. Heras - K.A. van der Hucht - Th. van der Hulst - R. Huygen - H. Jacobs - G. Jakob - Th. Kamperman - R.O. Katterloher - D.J.M. Kester - D. Kunze - D. Kussendrager - F. Lahuis - H.J.G.L.M. Lamers - K. Leech - S. van der Lei - R. van der Linden - W. Luinge - D. Lutz - F. Melzner - P.W. Morris - D. van Nguyen - G. Ploeger - S. Price - A. Salama - S.G. Schaeidt - N. Sijm - C. Smoorenburg - J. Spakman - H. Spoon - M. Steinmayer - J. Stoecker - E.A. Valentijn - B. Vandenbussche - H. Visser - C. Waelkens - L.B.F.M. Waters - J. Wensink - P.R. Wesselius - E. Wiezorrek - E. Wieprecht - J.J. Wijnbergen - K.J. Wildeman - E. Young

Abstract:

The Short-Wavelength Spectrometer (SWS) is one of the four instruments on-board ESA's Infrared Space Observatory (ISO), launched on November 17, 1995. The spectrometer covers the wavelength range of 2.38 to 45.2 m with a spectral resolution ranging from 1000 to 2000. By inserting Fabry-Perot filters the resolution can be enhanced by a factor 20 for the wavelength range from 11.4 to 44.5 m. An overview is given of the instrument, its in-orbit calibration, performance, observing modes and off-line processing software.

Keywords:
Instrumentation : spectrographs - Methods: data analysis - Methods: observational - Techniques: Spectroscopic - Infrared: General

Full text (compressed)


   [ ISO Home Page | Astronomy and Astrophysics Page ]