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5.4 Dark Current Determination

In the pipeline processing, the dark current is taken as the average of the two dark current measurements performed respectively at the begining and at the end of each observation. However, it is known that this estimate of the dark current can sometimes give erroneous results when subtracted from the data, due to an intrinsic uncertainty in the measurement of the dark current. This sometimes leads to negative flux values. In such cases, OLP Version 10 choses either the dark current measurement attached to the observation, or a `fixed dark current' that was determined in dedicated calibration observations, whichever gives the best result, i.e. the less negative values after the dark subtraction. There is also the possibility to redo the dark current subtraction in LIA with the dark current chosen by the user.

The fixed dark current has been determined by three independent methods:

The results of the three independent means of measuring the dark currents are given in Table 5.4. They agree with each other to within one or two standard deviations. The low values for some detectors seen in the serendipity mode derivation are probably due to the lack of sampling of the pre-amplifier output and the different method used for deriving the photocurrent. The higher values derived from the hand-over illuminator operation reflect the fact that these are measured with a short integration time (8 s) and are therefore prone to problems of contamination by radiation hits. It is noteworthy that there appears to be no significant change in the level of the dark current between the middle and end of a revolution. This is in disagreement with predictions from tests made during pre-launch calibration (Price et al. 1992, [36]).


Table 5.4: Detector dark currents for the ten LWS detectors determined from four different observations: the special long observations in revolution 650, the illuminator operations at apogee and the serendipity mode data. The dark currents are given in units of $10^{-16}$ A. The quoted uncertainties are one standard deviation. The last two columns give the adopted `fixed dark currents' in A and their uncertainty.

Revolution 650 Apogee Serendipity Adopted dark current
Det. measurements meas. mode fixed dark uncertainty
  Mid Rev. End Rev.     current  
SW1 4.89$\pm$0.42 4.96$\pm$0.53 5.68$\pm$1.82 4.98$\pm$0.58 4.960E-16 5.447E-17
SW2 2.15$\pm$0.38 2.11$\pm$0.40 2.42$\pm$1.20 1.98$\pm$0.32 2.080E-16 4.255E-17
SW3 2.23$\pm$0.19 2.31$\pm$0.20 2.58$\pm$0.86 2.00$\pm$0.23 2.200E-16 2.085E-17
SW4 1.21$\pm$0.30 1.25$\pm$0.30 1.32$\pm$0.40 0.89$\pm$0.24 1.180E-16 3.404E-17
SW5 1.63$\pm$0.21 1.67$\pm$0.22 1.72$\pm$0.27 1.35$\pm$0.22 1.560E-16 2.383E-17
LW1 2.39$\pm$0.27 2.63$\pm$0.28 2.77$\pm$0.53 2.26$\pm$0.30 2.500E-16 2.936E-17
LW2 0.10$\pm$0.22 0.17$\pm$0.23 0.42$\pm$0.36 0.17$\pm$0.18 7.300E-18 2.723E-17
LW3 0.49$\pm$0.32 0.49$\pm$0.34 1.20$\pm$1.03 0.39$\pm$0.25 5.310E-17 3.915E-17
LW4 2.23$\pm$0.38 1.94$\pm$0.38 2.52$\pm$1.44 1.84$\pm$0.33 1.760E-16 4.213E-17
LW5 1.40$\pm$0.22 1.18$\pm$0.22 1.28$\pm$0.35 0.98$\pm$0.25 1.210E-16 2.511E-17


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Next: 5.5 In-orbit Sensitivity of Up: 5. Calibration and Performance Previous: 5.3 Fabry-Pérot Flux Calibration
ISO Handbook Volume III (LWS), Version 2.1, SAI/1999-057/Dc