Characterizing the Temporal and Spatial Stability of Atmospheric Transmission from 400 to 1050 nm.
Abstract
The transmission function of the atmosphere is formally a function of wavelength, time, and line-of-sight. Making simplifying assumptions, such as linearity with airmass and temporal stability, enables the coarse removal of atmospheric extinction from ground-based observations of astronomical sources. However, these assumptions have not been rigorously justified to percent level precision, and small scale temporal or spatial variations could introduce non-negligible systematic errors. Systematic errors due to the atmosphere stand to inhibit the high precision measurements which are the focus of next-generation astronomical studies. We present a method of characterizing temporal and spatial variation in atmospheric transmission via spectrographic measurements of at least two standard stars simultaneously. These observations can be made on small-aperture telescopes with a simple spectrograph and can be coupled to large-aperture astronomical telescopes in order to provide real-time atmospheric diagnostics. We also present a spectrograph designed to yield efficient observations on the broad wavelength range of 400-1050 nm and our first results from this instrument.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2006
- Bibcode:
- 2006AGUFM.A13B0892B
- Keywords:
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- 0300 ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE;
- 0360 Radiation: transmission and scattering