Calibration of the SST Image Scale Through the Use of Imaging Techniques
The Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope (SST) offers excellent imaging quality, but it has a comparatively small field of view. This means that while observing the solar photosphere, there has been no convenient way of calibrating the image scale of the telescope. Other telescopes, such as NASA's Solar...
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Zusammenfassung: | The Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope (SST) offers excellent imaging quality, but
it has a comparatively small field of view. This means that while observing the
solar photosphere, there has been no convenient way of calibrating the image
scale of the telescope. Other telescopes, such as NASA's Solar Dynamics
Observatory (SDO)utilize their larger Field of View (FOV) to use the solar disk
as a reference in order to measure the image scale. In the past, the image
scale of the SST has been determined by measuring the distance between the
moons of Jupiter in a captured SST image and comparing it to reference values,
as well as with the Venus transit of 2004. Both of these methods have their
drawbacks, including needing to open the telescope at night or waiting for the
very rare occurrence of a solar transit, which the telescope may not even be in
a position to observe. Additionally, assessing the accuracy of these methods
can be difficult. The purpose of this thesis is to examine the feasibility of
an idea proposed by the faculty of the Institute for Solar Physics at Stockholm
University, that would allow us to routinely calibrate the image scale of the
SST when desired and with known accuracy of the measurement, without the need
to open the telescope at night. The measurements performed so far are
consistent with the old value to about one third of a percent, with a total
uncertainty of the SST/CRISP image scale of about 0.1 percent. Resulting in a
grid spacing of the pinhole array of 5.15 arcseconds, which can be used to
determine the image scale of all the remaining science cameras of the SST. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1311.5148 |