REFERENCE WAVELENGTHS FOR ISO:
CAM AND PHOT FILTERS
ISSUE 1.0
SAI/97-002/DC
17/JAN/97
ANDREA MONETI, LEO METCALFE, BERNHARD SCHULZ
Reference Documents
R1) ISO Reference wavelengths SAI/96-240/Dc, 18/Dec/96R2) Golay 1974 in ``Introduction to Astronomical Photometry'', Ch. 2
This document summarises discussions held over the last three months or so, for the most part in the context of the monthly Cross-Calibration meetings, on how to present ISO photometric measurements. Specifically, it will specify the manner in which in-band fluxes will be converted to monochromatic flux densities, and the choice of wavelengths to which these flux densities will be referred.
The subject of the conversion of a heterochromatic photometric measurement to a monochromatic one has been sumarised in R1, and full details can be found in R2. Following extensive discussion, the decision was made to adopt the IRAS convention, where the conversion is performed assuming a constant energy spectrum, i.e. This has the advantage of making the results immediately comparable to IRAS data (though the filters are not identical), and the drawback that significant correction factors will have to be applied to most data, as was the case with the IRAS data, since most of the sources observed do not have a constant energy spectrum. These correction factors can be as large as , and are largest for the broadest filters.
Alternative choices were:
Options (1) and (2) would leave the conversion to monochromatic flux density entirely up to the user.
From the definition of isophotal wavelength, ,
where E is the measured in-band flux, and is the spectral response of the system, and with , it follows that
where the denominator is a property of the photometric system alone. And finally, to convert from to we use the relation
Note that equations (2) and (3) define a linear relation between the in-band flux, E, and the flux density at the reference wavelength, .
From a formal point of view the choice of reference wavelengths is absolutely arbitrary. A reasonable choice of , however, will give an idea of the spectral energy distribution (SED) of the source, but in order to determine the true SED the user must convert and to and by using a known or assumed source spectral shape. For this purpose, ``color correction tables'' will be computed which will give correction factors and observed colours for many different types of energy distributions (namely power laws with different exponents, and Plank laws with a wide range of temperatures).
For the moment, and for the purpose of data presentation, a set of reference wavelengths has been chosen such that
The reference wavelengths that deviate the most from either isophotal wavelength are the ones for the IRAS filters, for which the IRAS wavelengths have been adopted. The reference wavelengths are tabulated in Tables 1 and 2 for CAM and PHT filters, respectively.
name | ref. | purpose | name | ref. | purpose |
sw1 | 3.6 | cosm. | lw1 | 4.5 | Gen. Pur. |
sw2 | 3.3 | PAH | lw2 | 6.7 | Gen. Pur. |
sw3 | 4.4 | Gen. Pur. | lw3 | 14.3 | Gen. Pur. |
sw4 | 2.8 | Gen. Pur. | lw4 | 6.0 | PAH |
sw5 | 4.0 | Gen. Pur. | lw5 | 6.8 | Gen. Pur. |
sw6 | 3.7 | Gen. Pur. | lw6 | 7.7 | PAH |
sw7 | 3.0 | Gen. Pur. | lw7 | 9.6 | Silicates |
sw8 | 4.05 | Br | lw8 | 11.3 | PAH |
sw9 | 3.9 | Br comp. | lw9 | 14.9 | Gen. Pur. |
sw10 | 4.6 | CO fund. | lw10 | 12 | IRAS |
sw11 | 4.26 | CO |
name | ref. | purpose | name | ref. | purpose |
P3.29 | 3.3 | PAH | C50 | 65 | Gen. Pur. |
P3.6 | 3.6 | cosm. | C60 | 60 | Gen. Pur. |
P4.85 | 4.8 | Gen. Pur. | C70 | 80 | Gen. Pur. |
P7.3 | 7.3 | Gen. Pur. | C90 | 90 | Gen. Pur. |
P7.7 | 7.7 | PAH | C100 | 100 | Gen. Pur. |
P10 | 10.0 | Silicates | C105 | 105 | Gen. Pur. |
P11.3 | 11.3 | PAH | C120 | 120 | Gen. Pur. |
P11.5 | 12 | IRAS | C135 | 150 | Gen. Pur. |
P12.8 | 12.8 | [NeII] | C160 | 170 | Gen. Pur. |
P16 | 15.0 | Gen. Pur. | C180 | 180 | Gen. Pur. |
P20 | 20 | Gen. Pur. | C200 | 200 | Gen. Pur. |
P25 | 25 | IRAS | |||
P60 | 60 | Gen. Pur. | |||
P100 | 100 | Gen. Pur. |