Calibrating and Stabilizing Spectropolarimeters with Charge Shuffling and Daytime Sky Measurements
David Harrington, J.R. Kuhn, Rebecca Nevin

TL;DR
This paper presents calibration and stabilization techniques for high-resolution spectropolarimeters, enabling accurate polarization measurements by using charge shuffling and daytime sky observations, applicable to large telescopes like DKIST.
Contribution
The paper introduces a synchronized charge-shuffling method for CCD detectors that improves spectropolarimetric calibration accuracy, especially in systems with high cross-talk levels.
Findings
Achieved 0.01% SNR in polarized spectral line profiles at R=10,000
Recovered continuum polarization to 1% accuracy despite high cross-talk
Applicable techniques to other large telescopes for day and night observations
Abstract
Well-calibrated spectropolarimetry studies at resolutions of 10,000 with signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) better than 0.01\% across individual line profiles, are becoming common with larger aperture telescopes. Spectropolarimetric studies require high SNR observations and are often limited by instrument systematic errors. As an example, fiber-fed spectropolarimeters combined with advanced line-combination algorithms can reach statistical error limits of 0.001\% in measurements of spectral line profiles referenced to the continuum. Calibration of such observations is often required both for cross-talk and for continuum polarization. This is not straightforward since telescope cross-talk errors are rarely less than 1\%. In solar instruments like the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST), much more stringent calibration is required and the telescope optical design contains…
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