Abstract

Imaging spectropolarimetry is a new observing mode on the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) aboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) that was commissioned in Cycle 30 and is available to HST observers starting in Cycle 31 (i.e., from 2023). It is a technique that is accessible from ground-based observatories, but the superb spatial resolution afforded by HST/ACS combined with the slitless nature of HST/ACS grism spectroscopy opens up the possibility of studying polarized extended emission in a way that is not currently possible even with Adaptive Optics facilities on the ground. This mode could help to study interesting targets including (but not limited to) QSOs, active galactic nucleus and Radio Galaxies, ISM Dust Properties, Pre-Planetary Nebulae, Proto-Planetary and Debris Disks, Supernovae/Supernova Remnants, and solar system objects. This research note presents the preliminary results from the calibration programs used to calibrate imaging spectropolarimetry on HST/ACS.

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