Euclid preparation: The NISP spectroscopy channel, on ground performance and calibration
Abstract: ESA's Euclid cosmology mission relies on the very sensitive and accurately calibrated spectroscopy channel of the Near-Infrared Spectrometer and Photometer (NISP). With three operational grisms in two wavelength intervals, NISP provides diffraction-limited slitless spectroscopy over a field of $0.57$ deg$2$. A blue grism $\text{BG}\text{E}$ covers the wavelength range $926$--$1366$\,nm at a spectral resolution $R=440$--$900$ for a $0.5''$ diameter source with a dispersion of $1.24$ nm px${-1}$. Two red grisms $\text{RG}\text{E}$ span $1206$ to $1892$\,nm at $R=550$--$740$ and a dispersion of $1.37$ nm px${-1}$. We describe the construction of the grisms as well as the ground testing of the flight model of the NISP instrument where these properties were established.
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