Abstract We present JWST/NIRSpec dense-shutter spectroscopy (DSS). This novel observing strategy with the NIRSpec/MSA deliberately permits a high number of controlled spectral overlaps to reach extreme multiplex while retaining the low background of slit spectroscopy. In a single configuration over the JADES Origins Field, we opened shutters on all faint (mF444W 30 mag) zphot 3 candidates, prioritising emission-line science and rejecting only bright continuum sources. Using 33.6 and 35.8 ks on-source in G235M and G395M, we observed a single mask with ∼850 sources, obtaining spectroscopic redshifts for ∼540 galaxies over 2.5 ≲ z ≲ 8.9. The per-configuration target density in DSS mode is 4–5× higher than standard no- and low-overlap MSA strategies (200 sources), with no loss in redshift precision or accuracy. Line-flux sensitivities are 30 percent lower at fixed exposure time, matching the expected increase in background noise, but the gain in survey speed is 5× in our setup, more than justifying the penalty. The measured line sensitivity exceeds NIRCam/WFSS by at least ∼5 × (~25 × in exposure time) at λ ∼ 4 μm, demonstrating that DSS is a compelling method to gain deep, wide-band spectra for large samples. Crucially, NIRSpec/MSA could deliver even higher target allocation densities than those used here. We derive H α-based SFRs, gas-phase metallicities (including a large sample suitable for strong-line calibrations), and identify rare mini-quenched galaxies and broad-line AGN. DSS is immediately applicable wherever deep imaging enables robust pre-selection and astrometry, providing an efficient method to obtain large samples of faint emission-line galaxies, a compelling middle ground between the completeness of slitless surveys and the sensitivity and bandwidth of NIRSpec/MSA.
D’Eugenio et al. (Thu,) studied this question.