ISOCAM is the instrument on ISO designed to map selected areas of
the sky in the spectral region from 2.5 to 17 m at various
spatial and spectral resolutions. Polarization mapping is also
possible.
With ISOCAM it will be possible to study spectral features at wavelengths inaccessible from ground; one example is imaging of water vapor emission in the circumstellar environment. The morphology of spatial structures at a scale of a few arcmin can be investigated in broad and narrow band filters or with spectral imaging, with a spatial resoluion of a few arcsec.
The spatial resolution is limited by the diffraction at longer
wavelengths, and by the pointing of the satellite at shorter
wavelengths. For a 60 cm diameter telescope the diameter, in
arcsec, of the Airy disc /D =
(micron)/3, or
2.4
/D = 0.8
(micron) for
the first dark ring.
A wide range of astrophysical problems can be tackled with ISOCAM. Examples of current interest include:
This manual contains a description of the instrument such that observers understand its capabilities and the constraints, to be able to plan time efficient observations and to calculate observing times.