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GNIRS Observing Strategies and Guidelines

This page brings together information that might affect decisions on observing strategy in various GNIRS observing modes, and provide guidelines/tips to maximize observing efficiency and avoid common errors.  The justification for most of the guidelines here can be found on the various GNIRS web pages and OT Details page. If you discover inconsistencies, please let us know!

Planning your observing sequences:

Offsetting (Nodding, Dithering)

All infrared observations require background subtraction. This is accomplished by moving the telescope slightly from one integration to the next (a.k.a offsetting, dithering, nodding). Optimal dither patterns can improve efficiency at the telescope and maximize the signal-to-noise-ratio of the combined data. The offset sequences that you set up depend on the size of the object and the length of slit available to you. Ideally, you should take observations at several (not just two) positions on the slit. This provides better sky subtraction and rejection of bad pixels. This is not possible, though, where the slit is short or the object is extended. Here are some guidelines:

General:

  • If you only need to spend modest amounts of time on your object to reach the desired signal to noise, doing a longer sequence or 2 repetitions is generally better than a couple of positions at the maximum allowable time. Use the ITC to see whether you lose predicted S/N by doing more, shorter exposures. If the loss is small (5% or less), you should get better sky removal with the shorter exposure times. This is mainly an issue at the shorter wavelengths, since you are always doing very short exposures at L and M.
  • For very faint objects, it is better to maximize the exposure time (see below) at each dither position to minimize readnoise effects (and improve efficiency), even at the expense of slightly better sky subtraction. Often this is an important trade-off; again, use the ITC to experiment with your particular situation.
  • Long Slit:

  • When nodding along the slit remember that smaller nods more accurately retain the target in the slit than do large nods. Although the slit is 50-99 arcsec long it is not necessary to use all of it on small targets. For a point source, nods of 3-5 arcsec are ample.
  • For point sources or compact objects, aim to do 3-5 different positions on the slit, separated by 3-5 arcsec. It is probably better to go through a dither sequence twice with a smaller number of positions than once with a larger number. If the object is too large to do 3 different positions conveniently (>10 arcsec or so across), but you can still fit 2 positions on the slit, use two slightly different positions at both the “A” and “B” positions in the sequence. That is, to dither +/- 15 arcsec, make your sequence +16, -16, -14, +14 arcsec. Likewise, for “on” and “off” (sky) sequences, shift both the on and off positions by an arcsec or two.
  • For objects of moderate extent (<50 arcsecs), large offsets can be used to keep the object in the slit. In this case, guiding should be enabled at all positions. This reduces efficiency somewhat for each nod, but is compensated by collecting source photons at all positions.
  • For larger extended objects, offsets to sky are necessary which nominally do not require guiding - specify to "freeze" the PWFS at these positions for maximum efficiency. It is a good idea to dither the sky positions by a few arcseconds to facilitate removal of accidental point sources.
  • Cross Dispersed Mode:

  • The cross-dispersed slit is so short (6 arcsec) that the best you can do with a point source is 2 different positions, separated by 3 arcsec (offsets +1.5, -1.5 arcsec). For an object with any measurable extent, you are forced to go to an “on”/”off” sequence. If the object is compact enough, it will be advantageous to do more than one “on” position, even if the two positions are shifted by only a few pixels (it’s probably desirable to make any shifts an integral number of pixels). Always do different “off” positions and spend the same amount of time on object and on sky for best sky subtraction.
  • Integral Field Unit (IFU):

  • The same approach should be used for the IFU as for the cross-dispersed mode for extended objects (there is no gain in signal to noise using the IFU for a point source, and a lot more effort in data reduction). Here, however, you can dither in 2 dimensions, and may want to set up an 8-point on/off sequence which uses a total of 4 different “on” positions offset by a few pixels in both directions.

Read Modes

The read mode itself is automatically set by the exposure time per coadd, so the users should evaluate the best strategy when setting the integration time: at or below a wavelength of 2.5um, spectroscopy of faint sources should make use of multiple read pairs ("Faint Object " or “Very Faint Object” read modes). The very faint source mode provides slightly better read noise, but adds 18 seconds of overhead per exposure (or coadd). If  exposures of 60secs or longer are feasible, it will give slightly better performance between airglow lines. (Look at the noise plot in the ITC; if the regions of interest to you have noise around 10-20 electrons/spectral pixel, use this mode). For shorter exposures (20-60secs), the faint object mode will be satisfactory. (See detector page for overheads associated with each readmode.)

Bright standard star observations are much shorter and will use the single read pair ("Bright Objects"). 

All of these modes use the same bias (well depth), so you can calibrate objects observed in one mode with standards observed in another. This is not true when objects and standards are observed with different bias.

Spectroscopy in the L and M bands should be done in the “high background mode”, which provides greater well depth but higher dark current and read noise (which is irrelevant since all images are background-limited).

The "Acquisition" mode is available only within the GNIRS sequence iterator and is intended for very short (0.2sec) acquisition images with shallow bias.


Maximum Exposure Times

The maximum exposure time you should use is set by three constraints:

(1) Saturation on the sky,
(2) Saturation on the object, and
(3) Sky variations during a dither sequence.

The GNIRS exposure times page gives safe limits for currently available configurations. You can check background in the ITC for any configuration by squaring the background value shown in the result, and then dividing by the number of pixels in the software aperture used. The background per pixel should be kept at 50,000 electrons maximum for shallow well (K and shorter wavelengths), and 100,000 for deep well (L,M). In general, avoid very long exposure times, because the sky will vary significantly between frames, and you will accumulate a larger number of radiation events per image. Unless the ITC shows a significant loss in formal signal to noise, a good maximum value is 900 seconds.

Bright objects may saturate the array before the background does. Check the recommended exposure times and scale the values to your particular case. You can check for object saturation with the ITC by dividing the signal counts by the number of pixels in the software aperture. It is helpful to set the aperture directly to a value around the image FWHM to ensure that you are looking at peak counts. If you have asked for cloud or seeing conditions worse than the median, you should do the saturation check under median conditions (70% IQ and 50% cloud). In general, check anything brighter than 12th magnitude in K band and below, 7th magnitude in L, and 1st magnitude at M. So long as the integration times are only a few seconds, you might as well do 2-3 co-adds per position as well. This is especially advisable if you have set allowable cloud percentile to 70% or worse.

Continuous Elapsed Time on Source

Science observations should not exceed ~60 minutes elapsed time for the 0.1" slit, ~90 minutes for the 0.3" slit, and 120 minutes for the 0.675" or larger slits. This is to allow for re-centering the object in the slit (correcting for flexure between the PWFS and GNIRS). Targets requiring more time should be broken into multiple observations, with accompanying acquisition observations. These observations may be executed on separate nights, but even when executed sequentially the acquisition obs. (and accompanying overhead) will be used to check slit centering.


Last update December 2005; Bernadette Rodgers and Greg Doppmann
Original content, Jay Elias