The night-sky at the Calar Alto Observatory
S.F. Sanchez, J. Aceituno, U. Thiele, D. Perez-Ramirez, J. Alves

TL;DR
This paper characterizes the night-sky properties at Calar Alto Observatory from 2004 to 2007, including spectrum, brightness, atmospheric conditions, and suitability for optical astronomy.
Contribution
First detailed optical spectrum of Calar Alto's night sky and comprehensive analysis of its observational conditions over three years.
Findings
Calar Alto has a dark sky suitable for optical observations up to I-band.
Approximately 70% of nights are useful for astronomy, with 30% being photometric.
Median seeing is around 0.90 arcseconds, favorable for high-resolution observations.
Abstract
We present a characterization of the main properties of the night-sky at the Calar Alto observatory for the time period between 2004 and 2007. We use optical spectrophotometric data, photometric calibrated images taken in moonless observing periods, together with the observing conditions regularly monitored at the observatory, such as atmospheric extinction and seeing. We derive, for the first time, the typical moonless night-sky optical spectrum for the observatory. The spectrum shows a strong contamination by different pollution lines, in particular from Mercury lines, which contribution to the sky-brightness in the different bands is of the order of ~0.09 mag, ~0.16 mag and ~0.10 mag in B, V and R respectively. The zenith-corrected values of the moonless night-sky surface brightness are 22.39, 22.86, 22.01, 21.36 and 19.25 mag arcsec^-2 in U, B, V, R and I, which indicates that…
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