Artículo de revista
Correcting the extended-source calibration for the herschel-SPIRE fourier-transform spectrometer
Fecha
2018Registro en:
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volumen 475, Issue 1, 2018, Pages 321-330
13652966
00358711
10.1093/mnras/stx3178
Autor
Valtchanov, I.
Hopwood, R.
Bendo, G.
Benson, C.
Conversi, L.
Fulton, T.
Griffin, M.
Joubaud, T.
Lim, T.
Lu, N.
Marchili, N.
Makiwa, G.
Meyer, R.
Naylor, D.
North, C.
Papageorgiou, A.
Pearson, C.
Polehampton, E.
Scott, J.
Schulz, B.
Spencer, L.
Institución
Resumen
We describe an update to the Herschel-Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE)
Fourier-transform spectrometer (FTS) calibration for extended sources, which incorporates
a correction for the frequency-dependent far-field feedhorn efficiency, ηff. This significant
correction affects all FTS extended-source calibrated spectra in sparse or mapping mode,
regardless of the spectral resolution. Line fluxes and continuum levels are underestimated
by factors of 1.3–2 in thespectrometer long wavelength band (447–1018 GHz; 671–294 µm)
and 1.4–1.5 in the spectrometer short wavelength band (944–1568 GHz; 318–191 µm). The
correction was implemented in the FTS pipeline version 14.1 and has also been described in the
SPIRE Handbook since 2017 February. Studies based on extended-source calibrated spectra
produced prior to this pipeline version should be critically reconsidered using the current
products available in the Herschel Science Archive. Once the extended-source calibrated
spectra are corrected for ηff, the synthetic photometry and the broad-band intensities from
SPIRE photometer maps agree within 2–4 per cent – similar levels to the comparison of
point-source calibrated spectra and photometry from point-source calibrated maps. The two
calibration schemes for the FTS are now self-consistent: the conversion between the corrected
extended-source and point-source calibrated spectra can be achieved with the beam solid angle
and a gain correction that accounts for the diffraction loss.