“…On the one hand, wavelength-scan approaches, also known as staring-camera type, allow measuring monochromatic images one wavelength at a time, with the advantage of giving access to both spatial dimensions simultaneously. The wavelength selection device used influences greatly the GDOES EM performance: a monochromator gives access to a wide λ range but λ -scan is slow and it compromises light-throughput vs. spectral resolution; 8,9 a dichroic filter is very cost effective and can have a large numerical aperture (NA) but the λ range and spectral resolution for each filter are very limited, such that tens of filters would be needed for multi-elemental analysis; 14 acousto-optic tunable filters give fast random λ access and can also have a large NA but they have limited λ range and UV capabilities, spectral resolution that varies with λ , and can be costly. 15 On the other hand, line-scan approaches, also known as push-broom type, allow measuring one spatial dimension and the λ dimension simultaneously while the remaining spatial dimension has to be scanned.…”