Millimeter and sub-millimeter atmospheric performance at Dome C combining radiosoundings and ATM synthetic spectra
S. De Gregori (Roma-Sapienza), M. De Petris (Roma-Sapienza), B. Decina, (Roma-Sapienza), L. Lamagna (Roma-Sapienza), J. R. Pardo (Madrid-CSIC/INTA),, B. Petkov (Bologna-ISAC/CNR), C. Tomasi (Bologna-ISAC/CNR), L. Valenziano, (Bologna-IASF/INAF)

TL;DR
This study assesses Dome C's atmospheric conditions for millimeter and sub-millimeter astronomy by combining radiosoundings with synthetic spectra, providing a semi-empirical analysis across multiple spectral bands.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-empirical method using radiosoundings and ATM synthetic spectra to evaluate atmospheric transmission and stability at Dome C across 100 GHz to 2 THz.
Findings
Transmission decreases at higher frequencies.
Results align with previous studies.
Proposes a new Site Photometric Quality Factor.
Abstract
The reliability of astronomical observations at millimeter and sub-millimeter wavelengths closely depends on a low vertical content of water vapor as well as on high atmospheric emission stability. Although Concordia station at Dome C (Antarctica) enjoys good observing conditions in this atmospheric spectral windows, as shown by preliminary site-testing campaigns at different bands and in, not always, time overlapped periods, a dedicated instrument able to continuously determine atmospheric performance for a wide spectral range is not yet planned. In the absence of such measurements, in this paper we suggest a semi-empirical approach to perform an analysis of atmospheric transmission and emission at Dome C to compare the performance for 7 photometric bands ranging from 100 GHz to 2 THz. Radiosoundings data provided by the Routine Meteorological Observations (RMO) Research Project at…
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