The DICE calibration project: design, characterization, and first results
N. Regnault, A. Guyonnet, K. Schahman\`eche, L. Le Guillou, P., Antilogus, P. Astier, E. Barrelet, M. Betoule, S. Bongard, J.-C. Cuillandre,, C. Juramy, R. Pain, P.-F. Rocci, P. Tisserand, F. Villa

TL;DR
The DICE project develops a precise, LED-based calibration system for optical telescopes, achieving high accuracy in monitoring instrument passbands and filter positions to improve astronomical measurements.
Contribution
This work introduces a novel LED-based calibration device with detailed temperature-dependent modeling, enabling routine, high-precision telescope calibration.
Findings
Calibration beams are stable at 10^{-4} level.
Spectral intensity characterized with 3 Å precision.
Flux accuracy reaches 0.2-0.5%.
Abstract
We describe the design, operation, and first results of a photometric calibration project, called DICE (Direct Illumination Calibration Experiment), aiming at achieving precise instrumental calibration of optical telescopes. The heart of DICE is an illumination device composed of 24 narrow-spectrum, high-intensity, light-emitting diodes (LED) chosen to cover the ultraviolet-to-near-infrared spectral range. It implements a point-like source placed at a finite distance from the telescope entrance pupil, yielding a flat field illumination that covers the entire field of view of the imager. The purpose of this system is to perform a lightweight routine monitoring of the imager passbands with a precision better than 5 per-mil on the relative passband normalisations and about 3{\AA} on the filter cutoff positions. The light source is calibrated on a spectrophotometric bench. As our…
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