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Dark measurements

 

Examples of Dark frames are given in Figure gif for the SW array and gif for the LW array.

  
Table: DARK Procedures SW

  
Table: DARK Procedures LW

Measuring a dark current frame is a time consuming operation, because of the long stabilization time it requires for the detector: going from a previous flux level, a priori unknown, to a dark level, requires 200 stabilization exposures. This can be shortened, if the previous flux was known and low, as shown in Figures gif to gif.

The SW array has an automatic procedure (FAST-RAZ) which efficiently shortens the stabilization time required to about one minute when switching from light to dark, by doing many exposures and readouts with the shortest integration time. It is automatically set up every time a dark frame is measured.

A dark frame measurement will be done at the beginning of each orbit, with an accuracy of 0.5 ADU rms (SW) and 0.3 ADU rms (LW), this is likely to be the best dark frame to be used for all the observations of this orbit.

The time penalty for a dark frame measurement being high, the use of library data will always be recommended. The decision to perform a dark measurement for a given observation should be supported by strong accuracy arguments. In the following cases, the dark correction will have negligible effect on the accuracy of the observations:

  1. In high background conditions (, wide band pass, large PFOV) when the background signal is above 100 ADUs.
  2. In the beam-switching mode, where the dark contribution cancels out exactly in the subtraction of the reference frame from the source frame.
  3. In the micro-scanning mode, where the effects of the dark noise are diluted.
However, a good dark measurement may be needed for a high accuracy measurement when the level of the signal is below 100 ADU, such as in:
  1. Measurement with a low background signal, in the SW channel, or at short wavelength in the LW channel.
  2. Measurement with a CVF or a narrow band pass filter.
  3. Measurement with a small PFOV.





next up previous contents
Next: Dark measurement as Up: GENERAL PERFORMANCE OVERVIEW Previous: Polarizers and polarization



ISOCAM Observer's Manual - V1.0
Tue Oct 31 12:06:23 MET 1995