Paper
18 September 2015 Characterizing, controlling, and correcting distortions in the COS FUV detector
David J. Sahnow, George D. Becker, John H. Debes, Justin Ely, Sean A. Lockwood, Derck Massa, Cristina M. Oliveira, Steven V. Penton, Charles Proffitt, Julia Roman-Duval, Hugues Sana, Paule Sonnentrucker, Joanna Taylor
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Far Ultraviolet (FUV) detector on the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) is subject to a variety of distortions due to its analog nature. Thermal variations of the detector and electronics stretch and shift the active area. Geometric distortions on a range of spatial scales warp the two-dimensional spectral image. Changes due to detector walk – the dependence of detected position on pulse height – add distortions that change as a function of time. The calcos calibration pipeline includes corrections for each of these effects in the calibrated spectra, but these are imperfect, and they do not help with the target acquisition process, which uses raw detector coordinates. We discuss these distortions and their effect on the data, our attempts to mitigate them, the current pipeline corrections and their success at removing the effects, and possible modifications to improve the data quality in the future.
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
David J. Sahnow, George D. Becker, John H. Debes, Justin Ely, Sean A. Lockwood, Derck Massa, Cristina M. Oliveira, Steven V. Penton, Charles Proffitt, Julia Roman-Duval, Hugues Sana, Paule Sonnentrucker, and Joanna Taylor "Characterizing, controlling, and correcting distortions in the COS FUV detector", Proc. SPIE 9601, UV, X-Ray, and Gamma-Ray Space Instrumentation for Astronomy XIX, 96010Q (18 September 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2188529
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Calibration

Microchannel plates

Electronics

Target acquisition

Spectral calibration

Hubble Space Telescope

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