Bibcode
DOI
Vaduvescu, Ovidiu; McCall, Marshall L.
Bibliographical reference
The Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Volume 116, Issue 821, pp. 640-651.
Advertised on:
7
2004
Citations
14
Refereed citations
14
Description
Quantitative information about variations in the background at J and
K' are presented and used to develop guidelines for the
acquisition and reduction of ground-based images of faint extended
sources in the near-infrared, especially those that occupy a significant
fraction of the field of view of a detector or that are located in areas
crowded with foreground or background sources. Findings are based
primarily on data acquired over three photometric nights with the
3.6m×3.6m CFHT-IR array on the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope
(CFHT) atop Mauna Kea. Although some results are specific to CFHT,
overall conclusions should be useful in guiding observing and reduction
strategies of extended objects elsewhere. During the run, the mean
brightness of the background (more than 70% of which was from the sky)
varied significantly on a very short timescale: by 0.7% per minute in J
and 0.5% per minute in K', on average. Changes in the optical
depth of the sky were partly responsible, because stars faded as the
background level increased. A changing pattern in the background was
evident from differences of consecutive pairs of frames (0.3% per minute
in J and 0.2% per minute in K'), but this originated
primarily in the instrumentation. Any pattern over 3.6m associated with
the atmosphere changed at a rate less than about 0.06% per minute in
K' relative to the signal from the sky alone. To measure the
background to a precision of 1% per frame, exposures of extended targets
should be alternated with identical exposures of the background. In J
and K', target and sky exposures ought to be separated by no
more than 90 and 130 s, respectively. To observe a target larger than
about 40% of the field of view, background samples ought to be taken
with the target shifted completely out of the field. For smaller
targets, gains in efficiency can be made by shifting the target to a
different place on the array. The signal-to-noise ratio of the reduced
image of a target is maximized by evaluating the background for each
individual image using only the samples taken immediately before and
after. Provided background images are dithered, it is possible to
recognize and remove celestial contaminants through differencing.