Bibcode
Griffin, Matt; Dowell, C. Darren; Lim, Tanya; Bendo, George; Bock, Jamie; Cara, Christophe; Castro-Rodriguez, Nieves; Chanial, Pierre; Clements, Dave; Gastaud, Rene; Guest, Steve; Glenn, Jason; Hristov, Victor; King, Ken; Laurent, Glenn; Lu, Nanyao; Mainetti, Gabrielle; Morris, Huw; Nguyen, Hien; Panuzzo, Pasquale; Pearson, Chris; Pinsard, Frederic; Pohlen, Michael; Polehampton, Edward; Rizzo, Davide; Schulz, Bernhard; Schwartz, Arnold; Sibthorpe, Bruce; Swinyard, Bruce; Xu, Kevin; Zhang, Lijun
Referencia bibliográfica
Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2008: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter. Edited by Oschmann, Jacobus M., Jr.; de Graauw, Mattheus W. M.; MacEwen, Howard A. Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 7010, pp. 70102Q-70102Q-12 (2008).
Fecha de publicación:
8
2008
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
We describe the on-board electronics chain and the on-ground data
processing pipeline that will operate on data from the Herschel-SPIRE
photometer to produce calibrated astronomical products. Data from the
three photometer arrays will be conditioned and digitised by on-board
electronics and sent to the ground with no further on-board data
processing. On the ground, the data pipeline will process the data from
point source, jiggle-map, and scan-map observations in a fully automatic
manner, producing measured flux densities (for point source
observations) or maps. It includes calculation of the bolometer voltages
from the raw telemetry, glitch removal, and corrections for various
effects including time constants associated with the detectors and
electronics, electrical and optical crosstalk, detector temperature
drifts, flatfielding, and non-linear response of the bolometers to
strong sources. Flux density calibration will be with respect to
standard astronomical sources with the planets Uranus and Neptune being
adopted as the baseline primary standards. The pipeline will compute
estimated values of in-beam flux density for a standard flat νS(ν)
source spectrum.