The Long Wavelength Spectrometer (LWS, Clegg et al. 1996,
[9]) was one of the four
instruments on board the Infrared Space Observatory which operated
between November 1995 and April 1998. The LWS covered the spectral range
between 43 and 197m at medium (
150-200)
resolution using a diffraction grating and at high resolution
(
6800-9700) with either of
the two Fabry-Pérots additionally placed in the beam. ISO was operated
as an observatory and LWS users had the option of using any combination
of four observing modes defined as standard astronomical observation
templates (AOTs). These consisted of wavelength range scanning or line
scanning, using either the grating alone or with the Fabry-Pérot.
A sub-mode of the grating line scanning mode where the grating did
not move
from the rest position was also defined for narrow-band photometry.
The LWS was equipped with ten photoconductive detectors
overlapping in wavelength range, five operating in second order and five
in first order. A Ge:Be detector was used for the shortest wavelength range
(43-51
m), five Ge:Ga detectors for the 50-121
m range and
four stressed Ge:Ga detectors for the longest wavelength range
(108-197
m).