The night-sky at the Calar Alto Observatory II: The sky at the near infrared
S.F.Sanchez, U.Thiele, J.Aceituno, D.Cristobal, J.Perea, J.Alves

TL;DR
This study characterizes the near-infrared sky brightness, seeing, and useful observing time at Calar Alto Observatory over four years, providing valuable data for astronomers planning observations in this spectral range.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive analysis of near-infrared sky conditions at Calar Alto, including dependencies on airmass, season, and temperature, with new data on sky brightness and observing efficiency.
Findings
Calar Alto's near-infrared sky brightness is comparable to other major sites.
Typical seeing at 3.5m is about 1.0 arcsecond, close to atmospheric measurements.
Useful observing time is approximately 72%, consistent with previous estimates.
Abstract
We present here the characterization of the night sky-brightness at the near-infrared, the telescope seeing, and the fraction of useful time at the Calar Alto observatory. For this study we have collected a large dataset comprising 7311 near-infrared images taken regularly along the last four years for the ALHAMBRA survey (J, H and Ks-bands), together with a more reduced dataset of additional near-infrared images taken for the current study. In addition we collected the information derived by the meteorological station at the observatory during the last 10 years, together with the results from the cloud sensor for the last ~2 years. We analyze the dependency of the near-infrared night sky-brightness with the airmass and the seasons, studying its origins and proposing a zenithal correction. A strong correlation is found between the night sky-brightness in the Ks-band and the air…
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