Bibcode
Ábrahám, P.; Acosta-Pulido, J. A.; Klaas, U.; Bianchi, S.; Radovich, M.; Schmidtobreick, L.
Bibliographical reference
`The calibration legacy of the ISO Mission', proceedings of a conference held Feb 5-9, 2001. Edited by L. Metcalfe, A. Salama, S.B. Peschke and M.F. Kessler. Published as ESA Publications Series, ESA SP-481. European Space Agency, 2003, p. 89.
Advertised on:
0
2003
Citations
3
Refereed citations
3
Description
Chopping between the source and 1 or 2 background positions was an
ISOPHOT observing mode for faint source photometry. More than 7000
observations of this type were performed during the mission. We review
the main instrumental effects related to chopping, and describe the
data reduction steps and calibration strategies developed for this
mode. A robust signal processing has been invented which allows to
derive reliable difference signals from a chopped pattern. Signal losses
dependent on chopper frequency and flux change have been assessed from
comparison with staring observations. Chopper offsets have been
investigated from the analysis of non-detection measurements. The
current data reduction scheme, as implemented in the automatic
processing of OLP10, achieves accuracies in general better than 30%.
Far-infrared observations of faint sources close to the detection limit
may have higher uncertainties, partly due to cirrus confusion which is a
severe limitation of this observing mode.