Paper
21 September 2012 Absolute photometric calibration of IRAC: lessons learned using nine years of flight data
S. Carey, J. Ingalls, J. Hora, J. Surace, W. Glaccum, P. Lowrance, J. Krick, D. Cole, S. Laine, C. Engelke, S. Price, R. Bohlin, K. Gordon
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Significant improvements in our understanding of various photometric effects have occurred in the more than nine years of flight operations of the Infrared Array Camera aboard the Spitzer Space Telescope. With the accumulation of calibration data, photometric variations that are intrinsic to the instrument can now be mapped with high fidelity. Using all existing data on calibration stars, the array location-dependent photometric correction (the variation of flux with position on the array) and the correction for intra-pixel sensitivity variation (pixel-phase) have been modeled simultaneously. Examination of the warm mission data enabled the characterization of the underlying form of the pixelphase variation in cryogenic data. In addition to the accumulation of calibration data, significant improvements in the calibration of the truth spectra of the calibrators has taken place. Using the work of Engelke et al. (2006), the KIII calibrators have no offset as compared to the AV calibrators, providing a second pillar of the calibration scheme. The current cryogenic calibration is better than 3% in an absolute sense, with most of the uncertainty still in the knowledge of the true flux densities of the primary calibrators. We present the final state of the cryogenic IRAC calibration and a comparison of the IRAC calibration to an independent calibration methodology using the HST primary calibrators.
© (2012) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
S. Carey, J. Ingalls, J. Hora, J. Surace, W. Glaccum, P. Lowrance, J. Krick, D. Cole, S. Laine, C. Engelke, S. Price, R. Bohlin, and K. Gordon "Absolute photometric calibration of IRAC: lessons learned using nine years of flight data", Proc. SPIE 8442, Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2012: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter Wave, 84421Z (21 September 2012); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.927183
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CITATIONS
Cited by 12 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Calibration

Stars

Photometry

Cryogenics

Infrared telescopes

Space telescopes

Data modeling

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