skip to content
 
Swift Science Center Italian site Italian site U.K. site U.K. site

Notes for observing with the UVOT UV Grism

The UVOT UV grism can provide 1700 - 2900 Å spectra of modest S/N and spectral resolution R ~ 75 for stars in the magnitude range 11-15. The UV grism spectrum actually extends longward of 2900 Å but these longer wavelength regions can be confused by overlap from UV second-order light. Note that the V grism is sensitive down to 2800 Å, and is actually more sensitive than the UV grism for the longest wavelength UV light (2900 -3200 Å).

The wavelength calibration of the UV grism has been difficult because the spectra show a curvature and sensitivity that varies with detector position. Because the UVOT pointing is only repeatable to within a few arcseconds (even with a slew in place), there are variations even within consecutive calibration exposures. These variations are minimized by placing the target in the lower half of the detector, but such offsets are not possible if simultaneous XRT spectra are desired.

The following decisions need to be made when observing with the UV grism:
  • Slew in place?: The pointing accuracy after an initial slew may be only 1 or 2 arcminutes. This uncertainty is not significant for GRB followups with direct images, but can critically affect the calibration of the UV grism data, since there are large wavelength and sensitivity changes across the detector. The use of a second slew after the arrival at the target (a "slew in place") can reduce the pointing uncertainty to a few arcseconds. However, if one is primarily interested in XRT data then one might not want to spend the extra ~3 minutes required to improve the grism observation by taking a slew in place. Note that one often one tries to avoid observing with the grism during the first few and last few minutes of an orbit anyway (because the sky background is large) so the use of a slew in place does not affect the prime grism science time.
  • Clocked or Nominal Mode?: Zero-order spectra only appear in the area covered by the grism, whereas first-order spectra can be dispersed off the edge of the grism. Thus, in principle, the use of clocked mode can minimize the contamination of first-order spectra by unrelated zeroth-order images. Unfortunately, for the UV grism the default clocking is insufficient to perform this separation for the UV first-order spectrum. However, clocked mode remains useful because it suppresses the total sky flux, and for that reason must be used in crowded fields (e.g. low Galactic latitudes). Clocked mode also has slightly better sensitivity (see below) and smaller spatial variations in wavelengths and sensitivity. One disadvantage of clocked mode is that it introduces vignetting and so spectra are retrieved over a smaller field, which may be important for extended sources or if a slew in place is not used. For sparse fields, the choice between clocked and nominal mode is often decided by which one gives a better roll angle for a particular observing date.
  • Roll Angle: The contamination of grism spectra by zero and first order of unrelated sources depends on the roll angle of the observation. An IDL grism simulator is available at http://idlastro.gsfc.nasa.gov/ftp/landsman/simgrism/ which displays a DSS image with simulated dispersed spectra for a given roll angle. (This software can be run under the IDL virtual machine, without an IDL license.) For a given observing time, the planners have very limited flexibility in choosing the roll angle. However, the simulator can be used to select a range of good observing dates or to choose between clocked and nominal model.
  • Exposure time: The June 2006 effective area for the U grism in the nominal and clocked modes at the target position is given in the table below. Note that this effective area is for computing the count rate integrated perpendicular to the dispersion, and that the dispersion varies from about 2.0 Å/pixel near 1800 Å to about 3.5 Å/pixel near 3000 Å. The "Cts/s" column gives the predicted counts/s (per pixel integrated perpendicular to the dispersion) for a source wtih a flat spectrum of 10^(-13) erg cm(-2) s(-1) Å(-1).

Wavelength
Nominal
Clocked
(Å)
cm^2
Cts/s
cm^2
Cts/s
1700
2.1
0.032
1.6
0.021
1800
3.4
0.063
3.5
0.065
1900
5.3
0.11
5.9
0.13
2000
6.9
0.17
8.3
0.20
2100
9.0
0.24
9.9
0.27
2200
10.7
0.32
11.4
0.35
2300
11.4
0.38
13.0
0.43
2400
12.0
0.43
14.4
0.52
2500
12.3
0.48
14.8
0.58
2600
12.5
0.52
14.8
0.62
2700
13.3
0.59
13.9
0.62
2800
13.3
0.63
12.1
0.57
2900
11.7
0.58
10.5
0.52

Effective Area

The effective area for all four grism modes is plotted below. Note that although the UV grism can record a visible spectrum, the sensitivity is less than half that of the V grism, and can suffer significant contamination from second-order UV light.

U grism effective area curve

Caveats

Some considerations to be aware of when using the UV grism.
  1. A single grism spectrum shows a fixed pattern noise that is only partially suppressed by applying a mod-8 correction. It may be useful to combine spectra with shifted zero order positions to further suppress this fixed-pattern noise.
  2. There is currently no method to correct for coincidence losses of bright spectra. Co-I losses will begin at long wavelength at a flux of approximately 10^(-12) erg cm-2 s-1 A-1.
  3. The wavelength anchor point is defined by the centroid of the zeroth order. However, because the zeroth order is dispersed the position of the anchor point may vary with spectral shape. In addition, mod-8 noise may shift the position of the centroid. Finally, the zeroth order (which contains both UV and visible light) is often saturated. So there may be a zero point shift of up to 3-4 pixels ( 10 Å).
  4. Because the grism has not be used to study GRBs, the SWIFT grism tools (e.g. uvotimgrism) have been given low priority. In particular, the centroid of the zero order must be determined outside of the Swift tools.

Example Spectra

Three examples of UVOT UV grism spectra are shown below. Figure 1 shows RS Oph in outburst (V ~ 9.5) in March 2006. This spectrum shows N III] 1750 Å emission which is at the extreme wavelength limit of the UV grism sensitivity. Figure 2 is a spectrum of comet 3P/Schwassmann-Wachmann obtained in April 2006 showing CS and OH ultraviolet emission lines. Figure 3 shows a UVOT spectrum of the 14th magnitude calibration white dwarf WD0 320-539 compared with an HST spectrum (in green). For this hot source, the second-order UV light is already present at 2850 Å, as seen in the excess flux compared to the HST spectrum.


Figure 1

U grism spectrum of RS Oph


Figure 2

U grism image of Comet 73P

Figure 3

Grism spectrum of WD0320-539


If you have a question about Swift, please contact us via the Feedback form.

This page was last modified on Thursday, 14-Dec-2006 11:30:42 EST.

Science Mission Directorate Universe Division
Beyond Einstein | Origins

  • Questions/Comments/Feedback
  • Find helper applications like Adobe Acrobat
  • Learn about black holes, astronomy & more!
  • A service of the Astrophysics Science Division at NASA/ GSFC

    Swift PI: Neil Gehrels,
    Responsible NASA Official: Phil Newman
    Web Curator: J.D. Myers
    PAO Contact: Francis Reddy (301-286-4453)
    Privacy Policy and Important Notices.