5.3. The HIFI Calibration Scheme

5.3.1. Internal Load Calibrations

Like most other heterodyne instruments, HIFI makes use of the two internal loads to provide the bandpass calibration (sensitivity) for each backend (spectrometer) channel and polarization. The effective radiation offered by these loads is corrected from the imperfect coupling of the mixer beam to the load apertures. These couplings were measured on the ground during instrument level testing. The instrument bandpass γrec and the receiver temperature Jrec obtained via the load measurements are provided by Eq. (9) and (10) from [10].

The "l" superscript indicates that the bandpass and receiver temperatures are measured on the internal loads.

In the above equations c indicates count rates measured on hot or cold loads, z a "zero frame" removal. J's indicate the hot and cold load effective temperature measures -- as measured by temperature sensors on the internal hot and cold loads, and ηh and ηc indicate the coupling of the beam to the hot and cold loads.

At this stage of our calibration, we have made the following assumptions:

  • the load coupling coefficients are similar in both side-bands. Load coupling for the hot and cold loads was measured during on-ground testing. The coupling coefficients are very close to 1. Values currently used in the pipeline are shown in Table 5.1, “Internal load couplings presently used”.

  • the standing wave pattern does not change between the two thermal loads. This is only partly true since the optical path between the mixers and the respective loads will differ by about 10mm. Generally, the standing waves arising from the load surfaces are expected to be negligible enough to show only as second order contributions. Actually the dominating error factor in bands 1 and 2 are such standing waves. For strong continuum sources, there is a strong beat between 92 and 98 MHz ripples from the loads appearing in the spectra. In the future there may be a user-selectable alternative calibration scheme that would avoid introducing those standing waves from the loads into the science data for, e.g., strong continuum sources.

  • the side-band ratio are normalised, i.e. it does not define the ratio between the two side-bands, but the ratio between the response in one side-band and the combined response in both side-band. Side-band ratios are measured on the ground and would provide a further correction to the spectrum depending on whether the signal (emission-line(s) of interest) are in the upper or lower sideband of the instrument (see Chapter 2, HIFI Instrument Description).

Table 5.1. Internal load couplings presently used

Band

Frequency (GHz)

ηh (H;V)

ηc (H;V)

1

480.0

0.991;0.992

0.959;0.97

1

640.0

0.991;0.992

0.98;0.983

2

640.0

0.993;0.988

0.993;0.996

2

800.0

0.993;0.988

0.993;0.996

3

800.0

0.996;0.992

0.988;0.987

3

960.0

0.996;0.982

0.988;0.987

4

960.0

0.997;0.994

0.995;0.996

4

1120.0

0.997;0.994

0.995;0.996

5

1120.0

0.987;0.985

0.993;0.996

5

1280.0

0.987;0.985

0.993;0.996

6

1420.0

0.994;0.992

0.982;0.984

6

1710.0

0.994;0.992

0.982;0.984

7

1420.0

0.998;0.985

0.97;0.973

7

1710.0

0.998;0.985

0.97;0.973


5.3.2. OFF calibration

In addition to the two internal load calibrations, HIFI will use the observation of blank sky to reveal additional calibration information on the system. In contrast to ground-based observations where the observation of a reference position free of emission would provide mainly information about the atmosphere, we can use such a measurement for a better characterisation of the instrument response itself. In particular, measurements on blank sky help in deriving information about the difference in standing wave patterns that are occur between the load measurement and the astronomical observation.

The idea behind this OFF measurement is that the full frequency resolution of HIFI is not necessary to sufficiently sample the standing waves to be corrected in the system. Considering the typical optical paths involved in the instrument, it is sufficient to measure the standing wave effect with a frequency resolution of 10 MHz. Since we are smoothing our OFF measurements to a lower resolution some reduction in the observing time is required for characterisation of the standing waves with sufficient signal-to-noise.

For an accurate treatment of the standing wave effect, additional assumptions must be made on how they contribute to the instrument response (standing wave model). Two other parameters add to the unknowns when considering OFF measurements: the telescope forward efficiency ηl, and the telescope radiation JR,eff. All these effects are superposed in the OFF measurements. It is however reasonable to assume that standing waves will appear as the variation across a band while the telescope contribution will be identified as an average contribution over the band (see [10]).

So far we have considered three standing wave cases:

  • standing wave contributing as additive terms to the receiver noise across the bandpass (e.g. sine waves).

  • standing wave changing the coupling to the telescope (via the forward efficiency).

  • standing waves changing the overall gain. Such waves show up as enhanced spectral baseline ripples against strong continuum sources such as planets.

The preference to one or other of these models is currently being investigated for different LO settings and cases from the performance verification phase.

5.3.3. Differencing observations:

To correct for instrument drift effects, the astronomical observations will use a differencing scheme where the astronomical source and a reference are observed in an alternating sequence. HIFI uses four basic approaches: total power (also called Position Switch), sky chop (also called Double Beam Switch), load chop and frequency switch (see chapter on observing modes). Reference [10] gives some examples of the equations obtained in various differencing schemes, and depending on the standing wave model approach. In particular, it shows how both line and continuum contributions to the signal can be separately treated. The continuum term only contains the radiation from the source and the blank sky in its surrounding. The continuum radiation seen from the warm telescope structure cancels out in all equations by means of the OFF calibration.

In essence, the OFF calibration combined to the differencing approach always provides a double difference. The double difference corrects for the standing waves in the baselines but from the point of view of observational noise, ON and OFF measurements are equivalent. Thus the use of an OFF calibration may be less efficient that total power measurements. This is depending on the system stability, which could offer the possibility to use one OFF calibration measurement for a series of source measurement.

5.3.4. Non-linearity:

In all equations and references mentioned above, it has been assumed that the instrument response to any radiation field is linear. Deviations from a linear behaviour are expected mainly in the IF branch including the spectrometers. However from ground-based measurements, it was concluded that these deviations are not significant (1% or less), and can in any case be measured and corrected in the data processing.

5.3.5. Blank-sky contribution:

The main contribution from the blank sky comes from the dust emission in the Milky Way, which is the brightest extended source of radiation in the considered wavelength region. For a typical Galactic OFF position 4-5 degrees from the Galactic plane at 500 GHz, the continuum intensity corresponds to 10-3 K, and thus is far from having any noticeable influence. In sky regions closer to the Galactic plane, the continuum intensity increases but remains insignificant. Only in the direction of the Galactic centre the continuum emission becomes no longer negligible. These numbers are based on the work of Schlegel et al. ([15]) who obtained the spatial distribution of the dusty density and temperature combining IRAS and DIRBE data.

5.3.6. Conversion between Antenna Temperature and Janskys:

The HIFI calibrated product, as obtained from the pipeline, is provided in antenna temperature (TA). To convert this to a source flux in Janskys requires some knowledge of the beam at the frequency used. HIFI beam information is discussed in Section 5.5.2, “Beam Characteristics”. The formula for conversion is:

S/TA = 326.9/ηA Jy/K

The value of ηA for each subband is listed in Table 5.5, “HIFI beam efficiencies ”.