Euclid. IV. The NISP Calibration Unit
Euclid Collaboration: F. Hormuth (1, 2), K. Jahnke (2), M. Schirmer, (2), C. G.-Y. Lee (3, 4), T. Scott (3), R. Barbier (5), S. Ferriol (5), W., Gillard (6), F. Grupp (7, 8), R. Holmes (9), W. Holmes (10), B. Kubik (5),, J. Macias-Perez (11), M. Laurent (12), J. Marpaud (11)

TL;DR
The paper presents the design, implementation, and performance of the Euclid NISP calibration unit, the first space-based LED calibration lamp, enabling precise near-infrared detector calibration for the Euclid mission.
Contribution
It introduces the first space-based LED calibration lamp for NIR detectors, detailing its design, qualification, and integration into the Euclid satellite.
Findings
Achieved stable, homogeneous illumination over the detector plane.
Supported calibration activities with minimal power consumption.
Successfully integrated and operational since Euclid's launch in July 2023.
Abstract
The near-infrared calibration unit (NI-CU) on board Euclid's Near-Infrared Spectrometer and Photometer (NISP) is the first astronomical calibration lamp based on light-emitting diodes (LEDs) to be operated in space. Euclid is a mission in ESA's Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 framework, to explore the dark universe and provide a next-level characterisation of the nature of gravitation, dark matter, and dark energy. Calibrating photometric and spectrometric measurements of galaxies to better than 1.5% accuracy in a survey homogeneously mapping ~14000 deg^2 of extragalactic sky requires a very detailed characterisation of near-infrared (NIR) detector properties, as well their constant monitoring in flight. To cover two of the main contributions - relative pixel-to-pixel sensitivity and non-linearity characteristics - as well as support other calibration activities, NI-CU was designed to provide…
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