Inferring telescope polarization properties through spectral lines without linear polarization
A. Derks, C. Beck, V. Martinez Pillet

TL;DR
This paper introduces a method to determine a telescope's polarization characteristics using spectral lines that lack intrinsic linear polarization, enabling calibration without specialized polarization signals.
Contribution
The study demonstrates a novel technique to infer telescope polarization properties from spectral lines without intrinsic linear polarization signals, applicable across visible wavelengths.
Findings
Successfully retrieved telescope polarization parameters at three wavelengths.
Matched calibration unit derived values within error margins.
Residual crosstalk remains at 3-10% after correction.
Abstract
We present a technique to determine the polarization properties of a telescope through observations of spectral lines that have no intrinsic linear polarization signals. For such spectral lines, any observed linear polarization must be induced by the telescope optics. We apply the technique to observations taken with the SPINOR at the DST and demonstrate that we can retrieve the characteristic polarization properties of the DST at three wavelengths of 459, 526, and 615 nm. We determine the amount of crosstalk between the intensity Stokes I and the linear and circular polarization states Stokes Q, U, and V, and between Stokes V and Stokes Q and U. We fit a set of parameters that describe the polarization properties of the DST to the observed crosstalk values. The values for the ratio of reflectivities X and the retardance tau match those derived with the telescope calibration unit within…
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