LAMOST Spectrograph Response Curves: Stability and Application to flux calibration
Bing Du, A-Li Luo, Zhong-Rui Bai, Xiao Kong, Jian-Nan Zhang, Yan-Xin, Guo, Neil James Cook, Wen Hou, Hai-Feng Yang, Yin-Bi Li, Yi-Han Song,, Jian-Jun Chen, Fang Zuo, Ke-Fei Wu, Meng-Xin Wang, You-Fen Wang, and, Yong-Heng Zhao

TL;DR
This study assesses the stability of LAMOST spectrograph response curves and demonstrates their effective application in flux calibration, significantly increasing usable spectra and achieving high calibration accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces the average spectrograph response curves (ASPSRC) method, enhancing flux calibration and expanding the number of calibrated spectra in LAMOST DR2.
Findings
ASPSRC is stable with errors <= 10%.
Application of ASPSRC increases LAMOST spectra by 52,181.
Flux differences with SDSS are less than 10%.
Abstract
The task of flux calibration for LAMOST (Large sky Area Multi-Object Spectroscopic Telescope) spectra is difficult due to many factors. For example, the lack of standard stars, flat fielding for large field of view, and variation of reddening between different stars especially at low galactic latitudes etc. Poor selection, bad spectral quality, or extinction uncertainty of standard stars not only might induce errors to the calculated spectral response curve (SRC), but also might lead to failures in producing final 1D spectra. In this paper, we inspected spectra with Galactic latitude |b|>=60 degree and reliable stellar parameters, determined through the LAMOST Stellar Parameter Pipeline (LASP), to study the stability of the spectrograph. To guarantee the selected stars had been observed by each fiber, we selected 37,931 high quality exposures of 29,000 stars from LAMOST DR2, and more…
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