EUV SpectroPhotometer (ESP) in Extreme Ultraviolet Variability Experiment (EVE): Algorithms and Calibrations
Leonid Didkovsky, Darrell Judge, Seth Wieman, Tom Woods, Andrew Jones

TL;DR
This paper details the algorithms and calibration procedures for the EUV SpectroPhotometer (ESP) onboard NASA's SDO, enabling precise measurement of solar EUV irradiance across multiple wavelength bands.
Contribution
It introduces new calibration methods and algorithms for converting ESP's count rates into accurate solar irradiance measurements.
Findings
Calibration parameters closely match measurements from other EUV instruments.
Pre-flight calibration at NIST's synchrotron facility was successful.
ESP provides reliable solar EUV data consistent with existing instruments.
Abstract
The Extreme ultraviolet SpectroPhotometer (ESP) is one of five channels of the Extreme ultraviolet Variability Experiment (EVE) onboard the NASA Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). The ESP channel design is based on a highly stable diffraction transmission grating and is an advanced version of the Solar Extreme ultraviolet Monitor (SEM), which has been successfully observing solar irradiance onboard the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) since December 1995. ESP is designed to measure solar Extreme UltraViolet (EUV) irradiance in four first order bands of the diffraction grating centered around 19 nm, 25 nm, 30 nm, and 36 nm, and in a soft X-ray band from 0.1 to 7.0 nm in the zeroth order of the grating. Each band's detector system converts the photo-current into a count rate (frequency). The count rates are integrated over 0.25 sec increments and transmitted to the EVE Science and…
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