TL;DR
This paper introduces a collimated beam projector system designed for precise telescope calibration, capable of distinguishing focusing light from stray light, and tracking optical component changes to improve photometric accuracy.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel collimated beam projector system and calibration scheme that enhances instrumental throughput measurement and monitors optical component evolution.
Findings
Prototype system successfully used with Dark Energy Camera.
Calibration scheme improves spectral and angular resolution.
System tracks changes in filter transmission and coatings.
Abstract
The precise determination of the instrumental response function versus wavelength is a central ingredient in contemporary photometric calibration strategies. This typically entails propagating narrowband illumination through the system pupil, and comparing the detected photon rate across the focal plane to the amount of incident light as measured by a calibrated photodiode. However, stray light effects and reflections/ghosting (especially on the edges of filter passbands) in the optical train constitute a major source of systematic uncertainty when using a flat-field screen as the illumination source. A collimated beam projector that projects a mask onto the focal plane of the instrument can distinguish focusing light paths from stray and scattered light, allowing for a precise determination of instrumental throughput. This paper describes the conceptual design of such a system,…
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