Bibcode
Schulz, B.; Huth, S.; Laureijs, R. J.; Acosta-Pulido, J. A.; Braun, M.; Castañeda, H. O.; Cohen, M.; Cornwall, L.; Gabriel, C.; Hammersley, P.; Heinrichsen, I.; Klaas, U.; Lemke, D.; Müller, T.; Osip, D.; Román-Fernández, P.; Telesco, C.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.381, p.1110-1130 (2002)
Advertised on:
1
2002
Journal
Citations
14
Refereed citations
13
Description
All observations by the aperture photometer (PHT-P) and the far-infrared
(FIR) camera section (PHT-C) of ISOPHOT included reference measurements
against stable internal fine calibration sources (FCS) to correct for
temporal drifts in detector responsivities. The FCSs were absolutely
calibrated in-orbit against stars, asteroids and planets, covering
wavelengths from 3.2 to 240 mu m. We present the calibration concept for
point sources within a flux-range from 60 mJy up to 4500 Jy for staring
and raster observations in standard configurations and discuss the
requisite measurements and the uncertainties involved. In this process
we correct for instrumental effects like nonlinearities, signal
transients, time variable dark current, misalignments and diffraction
effects. A set of formulae is developed that describes the calibration
from signal level to flux densities. The scatter of 10 to 20% of the
individual data points around the derived calibration relations is a
measure of the consistency and typical accuracy of the calibration. The
reproducibility over longer periods of time is better than 10%. The
calibration tables and algorithms have been implemented in the final
versions of the software for offline processing and interactive
analysis.