Download Presentation 2

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
II.3 Atmospheric background radiation
Main contributions to atmospheric sky background
at dark site:
• twilight at sunset/sunrise
• moonlight
• airglow and aurora
• thermal emission
It is sometimes convenient to
express astronomical surface
brightness in ‘S10 units’:
S10 = equivalent number of 10th
magnitude stars per (deg)2
twilight
sky brightness in zenith at ! = 550 nm
(in S10 and mag/(arcsec)2) between
sunset and ‘end of astronomical
twilight’ (hSUN = -18 °) :
without Moon,
Zodiacal light
Ex.: resolution human eye: ~1arcmin ! at hSUN =0° sky brightness
per res. element is –1.7mag, i.e. brighter than brightest stars
moonlight
average brightness of
moonlight as a function
of lunar phase,
in mag/(arcsec)2
for V and B
Q. : why this change ?
Q. : can you explain
this difference ?
•
•
airglow and aurora
airglow (nightglow) is line-emission that arises in the upper atmosphere
from photo-ionization/dissociation and photo-chemical reactions driven by
UV sunlight
nightglow is strongly variable,
most reactions involve O/O2/O3, N/N2, Na, H2O, OH:
both spatially and in time
Ex.: all-sky 6300 Å maps made at
Haleakala (Hawaii), 15min intervals
figures from Roach & Gordon:
‘The Light of the Night Sky’ (1973)
many different reactions contribute to nightglow:
tables from
Roach &
Gordon:
‘The Light of
the Night
Sky’ (1973)
nightglow lines can be very bright (OI 5577 Å, OH bands in near-IR ) ! stay away from them !
Airglow spectrum La Palma
Benn & Ellison (1998)
OH rotational-vibrational lines
Ingham (1962)
O2 lines & Zodiacal Light
|
|
| : street lamps
|
atmospheric radiation quantities are
frequently expressed in Rayleigh units:
at given !, 1 R " 4# · (surface brightness B)
a forest of emission lines, but between these lines with B in units of (106 quanta) · cm-2 · s-1 · sterad-1
the sky is very dark and the lines are narrow
relation to S10: 1 R·Å-1 = 227 S10 (vis)
! higher spectral resolution (R > 104) helps !
near-IR nightglow is dominated by
OH emission (rotation-vibration bands)
example of OH lines in H-band:
Table + fig. From
Maihara et al. PASP
105, 940,1993
Principal upper
atmosphere emissions
(Roach & Gordon 1973)
aurora is transient emission driven by high-energy particles from the Sun
mostly a polar phenomenon
! usually unimportant for observatories at latitudes < 40°
when active, aurora can be much brighter than nightglow
most prominent auroral lines:
OI 5577 Å, 6300 Å, H$ 6563 Å
for ! > 2.5 µm thermal radiation
from the atmosphere becomes
the dominant sky background
(hence: the ‘thermal infrared’)
Teff(atmosphere) % 250 K
! peak at ! % 12 µm,
but note: atmosphere is
not a black body !
RADIANCE W cm-2 sr-1 µ-1
thermal atmospheric emission
Sea level
Kirchhoff: in thermal equilibrium
emissivity = absorptivity
! IR sky emissivity is ‘mirror image’ of
IR atmospheric transmission curve
this hits us twice: &atm. high
! large fraction of source photons removed
and high sky background
consequence for ground-based observations in
the thermal IR: nearly all astronomical sources are
very faint w.r.t. sky background
Ex.: $ Lyr at ! = 20 µ:
F' = 12 Jy ! F! = 5.8 x10-14 W·m-2·µ-1
this was outside atmosphere ! on the ground: 1.6 x10-14 W·m-2·µ-1
sky radiance: % 10-5 W·cm-2·sr-1·µ-1 = 2.4 x10-12 W·m-2·µ-1·(arcsec) –2
so if (PSF = 1 arcsec (diffraction-limited 8-m telescope at 20 µ):
Fsky = 150 x F($ Lyr)
120 mJy source (m20µ = 5mag): Fsky = 15000 x Fsource !
Example:
FRAME TYPE 1: SKY+STAR
no chop-subtraction
!star invisible w.r.t. high
sky level
VLT + VISIR
Q-band
spectroscopy
medium
resolution:
18.2
R %1500
µm
solution:
differential
measurements
by means of
‘chopping +
nodding’
FRAME TYPE 2: STAR ONLY
sky removed by subtracting
chopped/nodded frames
A
nod-pos. 1 !
B
6”
A’
slit length 32.5”
B’
" nod-pos. 2
!
NB: all
‘raw’ data,
no flatfielding
more noisy
horizontal
bands:
drop in S/N at
strong sky line
clusters
18.6
-
+
-
3 chopped/nodded spectra of star HD4128 (F18µ = 25 Jy)
strong absoptions due to sky lines, but good S/N (> 100)
in clean windows
comparison with sky background outside atmosphere
outside atmosphere the optical/IR sky brightness is determined by:
• dust particles in inner solar system ! zodiacal light
• integrated light of faint stars and galaxies
zodiacal light is strongly concentrated
towards Sun and ecliptic plane:
brightness
!"!!=30°
40°
in the range ! = 3-70 µ
thermal emission from
zodiacal dust dominates
the sky brightness
60°
brightness
Gegenschein at 180°
180°
!"!!=90°
140°
zodiacal light in the visual: scattering
note surface brightness values in S10
ecliptic latitude
compare with backgr.
of stars + galaxies:
Note scale: 1 MJy/sterad
= 2.35x10-5 Jy/arcsec2
ISO data, Leinert et al. A&A 393,1073, 2002
! (µ)
Gegenschein
Zodiacal light seen
from Earth in the visible
Zodiacal light
II.4 Atmospheric turbulence
turbulence is caused by temperature fluctuations in the
convectively unstable troposphere (h < 10 km)
thermal conductivity of air is low ! )T can live long
)P is smoothed out very quickly (sound velocity !)
!
a) turbulence cells have ()T, )*) w.r.t. environment, but )P = 0
b) once formed, these cells can live rather long (> 1 s)
the lightpath is influenced by )* because (n-1) + *
! turbulence cells work as weak positive/negative
lenses that float with wind velocity through the line of
sight causing 2 effects:
fluctuations in direction ! ‘seeing’
fluctuations in brightness ! ‘scintillation’
apply ideal gas law (index 0 for ambient quantities outside cell):
(n–1)/(n0 –1) = * / *0 = (PT0) / (P0T), P = P0 ! )n = -(n0-1)·(T0/T2)·)T
at sea level:
T % T0 % 300K, n0 = 1.000293 (! = 550 nm) ! )n % 10-6 ·)T
at altitude h:
(nh-1) = e-h/H ·(n0-1) with H = scale height atmosphere % 8.5 km
! )n = -10-6 · e-h/H · )T
)T % 0.1-1 K, h < 10 km ! cells have )n % 10-6–10-7
! direction changes in range 0.1-1 arcsec
very simple model for optical effects of turbulence cell
flat wavefront
scintillation:
)I + h.e-h/H
assume:
atmosphere is isothermal,
in hydrostatic equilibrium
take turbulence cell at height h,
with diameter L and n = n0+)n
in figure: )n > 0 ()T < 0)
! wavefront retarded inside cell
seeing:
), + e-h/H
observations confirm this: turbulence in lower layers has
highest weight for seeing (ground layer and dome seeing !)
L” = L –2h.),
a) direction changes: seeing
for small h and typical )T % 1°: ), = 2x10-6 rad = 0.4”
L’ = L[n0/(n0+)n)] ! ), = 2(L-L’)/L =
= 2)n / (n0+)n) % 2)n = -2x10-6 ·)T ·e-h/H
this function peaks at h = 0
Dtel. - L : at any time only 1 cell in beam ! PSFtelescope
unaffected, but whole image shifts
Dtel > L :
image is smeared into seeing disc
without seeing a diffraction-limited telescope with aperture D >L
has PSF-diam. . = 1.2 !/D (D= 10 m, ! = 0.5 µ ! . = 0.01”)
with seeing: image becomes blob of rapidly moving ‘speckles’ with
overall diam. ), regardless of telescope diam. (diam. speckles: 1.2 !/D)
seeing - a practical example
~1 arcsec
Q : can you estimate the diameter of the telescope ?
Related documents