IRIS: A new generation of IRAS maps
Marc-Antoine Miville-Deschenes, Guilaine Lagache

TL;DR
IRIS is an improved all-sky infrared map dataset derived from IRAS data, with enhanced calibration, destriping, and zodiacal light subtraction, providing high-resolution information crucial for astrophysics and cosmology research.
Contribution
This paper introduces IRIS, a new generation of IRAS maps with significant improvements in calibration, destriping, and zodiacal light subtraction, addressing limitations of previous IRAS data products.
Findings
Enhanced image quality and calibration accuracy.
Better zodiacal light subtraction and destriping.
Improved data for astrophysics and cosmology applications.
Abstract
The Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) had a tremendous impact on many areas of modern astrophysics. In particular it revealed the ubiquity of infrared cirrus that are a spectacular manifestation of the interstellar medium complexity but also an important foreground for observational cosmology. With the forthcoming Planck satellite there is a need for all-sky complementary data sets with arcminute resolution that can bring informations on specific foreground emissions that contaminate the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation. With its 4 arcmin resolution matching perfectly the high-frequency bands of Planck, IRAS is a natural data set to study the variations of dust properties at all scales. But the latest version of the images delivered by the IRAS team (the ISSA plates) suffer from calibration, zero level and striping problems that can preclude its use, especially at 12 and 25…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCalibration and Measurement Techniques · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors
