We determine and tabulate A [λ] /A K , the wavelength dependence of interstellar extinction, in the Galactic plane for 1.25µm ≤ λ ≤ 8.0µm along two lines of sight: l = 42 • and l = 284 • . The first is a relatively quiescent and unremarkable region; the second contains the giant H II region RCW 49 as well as a "field" region unrelated to the cluster and nebulosity. Areas near these Galactic longitudes were imaged at J, H, and K bands by 2MASS and at 3-8µm by Spitzer for the GLIMPSE Legacy program. We measure the mean values of the color excess ratios (A [λ] − A K )/(A J − A K ) directly from the color distributions of observed stars. The extinction ratio between two of the filters, e.g. A J /A K , is required to calculate A [λ] /A K from those measured ratios. We use the apparent JHK magnitudes of giant stars along our two sightlines, and fit the reddening as a function of magnitude (distance) to determine A J /kpc, A K /kpc, and A J /A K . Our values of A [λ] /A K show a flattening across the 3-8µm wavelength range, roughly consistent with the Lutz et al. (1996) extinction measurements derived for the sightline toward the Galactic center.
GLIMPSE (Galactic Legacy Infrared Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire), a SIRTF Legacy Science Program, will be a fully sampled, confusion-limited infrared survey of the inner twothirds of the Galactic disk with a pixel resolution of ∼ 1.2 ′′ using the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC ) at 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 µm. The survey will cover Galactic latitudes |b| ≤ 1 • and longitudes |l| = 10 • to 65 • (both sides of the Galactic center). The survey area contains the outer ends of the Galactic bar, the Galactic molecular ring, and the inner spiral arms. The GLIMPSE team will process these data to produce a point source catalog, a point source data archive, and a set of mosaicked images. We summarize our observing strategy, give details of our data products, and summarize some of the principal science questions that will be addressed using GLIMPSE data. Up-to-date documentation, survey progress, and information on complementary datasets are available on the GLIMPSE web site: www.astro.wisc.edu/glimpse.
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