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S2. EUV Irradiance

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... packets, merge image data, separate by science channel and filter wheel position ... AIA/HMI Science Team Meeting ... Response of AIA 194 channel shown in red. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: S2. EUV Irradiance


1
S2. EUV Irradiance Calibration
2
EUV Observations
  • Most of the new missions that make the next 5
    years of solar observations look so exciting
    carry EUV/SXR instruments
  • Solar-B EIS, XRT
  • STEREO SECCHI EUVI
  • GOES SXI, XRS
  • Two of the three SDO instruments are strongly
    focused on the EUV
  • Calibration of these EUV instruments is essential
    for a number of reasons
  • EVE calibration is important for understanding
    the effects of irradiance variability on the
    atmosphere
  • AIA calibration is important for understanding
    the thermal structure of the corona
  • Even scientific investigations that dont
    explicitly rely on calibrated EUV observations
    will benefit from cross-calibration of EUV
    instruments

3
Agenda
  • (slightly modified since the announcement was
    posted)
  • Overview of EVE calibration
  • Overview of AIA-EVE cross-calibration
  • Discussion
  • cross-calibration with other instruments
  • problems
  • priorities
  • procedures
  • Wanted practical ideas and questions, not
    necessarily solutions (yet)

4
EVE and those other instruments on SDO
  • Frank Eparvier
  • LASP / University of Colorado
  • eparvier_at_lasp.colorado.edu

5
Reminder EVE Instrument Overview
  • Key Components
  • EVE Optical Package (EOP)
  • MEGS
  • MEGS A SAM
  • MEGS B P
  • ESP
  • EVE Electrical Box (EEB)
  • Processor Memory
  • Interfaces (1553 HSB)
  • Power / Heaters / Control
  • CCD power converters
  • ESP power converters

EVE
AIA
HMI
EVE Resources EVE Resources
Power (orbit average) 43.9 Watts
Mass 54.2 kg
Data Rate 2 kbps (engineering) 7 Mbps (science)
Dimensions (L x W x H) 99 cm x 61 cm x 36 cm
SDO Spacecraft
6
How does EVE measure the EUV?
  • Multiple EUV Grating Spectrograph (MEGS)
  • At 0.1 nm resolution
  • MEGS-A 5-37 nm
  • MEGS-B 35-105 nm
  • At 1 nm resolution
  • MEGS-SAM 0-7 nm
  • At 10 nm resolution
  • MEGS-Photometers _at_ 122 nm
  • Ly-a Proxy for other H I emissions at 80-102 nm
    and He I emissions at 45-58 nm
  • EUV Spectrophotometer (ESP)
  • At 4 nm resolution
  • 17.5, 25.6, 30.4, 36 nm
  • At 7 nm resolution
  • 0-7 nm (zeroth order)
  • In-flight calibrations from ESP and MEGS-P on
    daily basis and also annual calibration rocket
    flights

7
EVE Science Requirements
8
EVE Data Products
Level Algorithm purpose Scientifically Useful Description File Duration Daily Volume (MB)
0A Fast validity check No TLM consistency/quality checking 1 minute 76000
0B Assemble images, detailed data verification No Data checks for CRC and pixel parity, parse data packets, merge image data, separate by science channel and filter wheel position 1 minute 76000
0C Space Weather Yes Quick-look indices, MEGS-A, MEGS-B, SAM, MEGS-P ESP 1 minute 36
1 Apply calibration Yes (SAM, ESP, MEGS-P) Use measurement equations to produce irradiance units 1 hour 1095
2 Re-grid, extract lines Yes Bin data to fixed wavelength scale, integrate over emission features with background removal 1 hour 1160
3 Daily average Yes Merge all component data into daily averages, bin to 0.1 and 1 nm 24 hours 0.026
9
Calibration is a Lifetime Commitment
  • The Calibration Essentials
  • Understand the Measurement Equation
  • Know all the parameters that go into the
    measurement to irradiance conversion and assess
    how to best quantify each
  • Do a thorough error analysis and uncertainty
    budget
  • Calibrate pre-flight
  • Use a standard radiometric EUV source
  • Primary standards, such as NIST SURF-III source,
    are preferred (note SURF beam flux known to lt1
    for EUV ranges)
  • Track in-flight
  • Any instrument changes that will affect results
  • E.g. detector flat fields, gain changes,
    temperature effects, background signals,
  • Re-Calibrate in-flight
  • As close after launch as possible (changes since
    pre-flight calib.)
  • On a regular basis thereafter in order to track
    absolute changes
  • E.g. redundant channels, on-board sources, rocket
    underflights, proxy models
  • Validate
  • With measurements made with other instrumentation
  • Comparisons with models

10
MEGS A B Measurement Equations
Where
E Solar spectral irradiance
(x,y) Detector pixel location
S Raw signal from detector
?t Integration time
G Detector gain
fFF Flatfield correction
fLin Linearity correction
CBkg Background signal
CSL Scattered light signal
fImage Pixel contribution weighting to slit image
Good(x,y) Good pixels in slit image
ASlit Slit area
?? Dispersion (bandpass of single detector element)
Rc Responsivity at center of FOV
fFOV Pointing within FOV correction
fDegrad Degradation correction
f1AU Normalization to 1-AU
? Wavelength
EOS Higher order correction
11
MEGS-A B Error Analysis
  • The uncertainties of the various correction
    factors must be propagated through to determine
    the accuracy of the measured irradiance (note ?
    denotes uncertainty in the units of the variable)
  • For bright solar emission features the primary
    contributors to accuracy are the uncertainties in
    RC (the responsivity of the instrument) and the
    fDegrad (degradation correction)
  • For dim solar emissions, other uncertainties
    dominate, such as the precision of the
    measurement and the various corrections to the
    signal

12
EVE Uncertainty Budget and Verification Matrix
Symbol Parameter Description Error Budget Component Level Instrument Level Spacecraft Level On-Orbit Level
S Signal 34 X X X X
?t Integration Time 0.02 X
G Gain 1 X X
fFF Flatfield 2 X X X X
fLin Detector Linearity 0.2 X X
CBkg Background 20 X X X X
CSL Scattered Light 20 X X X
fImage Slit Image Weight 2 X X
ASlit Slit Area 8 X
?? Dispersion 6 X X
RC Responsivity at Center 12 X X
fFOV FOV Correction 10 X X
fDegrad Degradation Correction 18 X
f1AU 1-AU Correction 0.02 X
? Wavelength 0.2 X X
EOS Order Sorting 2 X X
EMeasured Irradiance Product 25
13
EVE In-Flight Calibration Activities
  • Continuous Internal Cross-Calibrations
  • Overlapping Channels within EVE
  • Daily
  • Filter wheel movements (dark, alternate filters)
  • Flat field lamps for MEGS CCDs (LEDs)
  • Quarterly Maneuvers
  • Cruciform Scans 150 arcmin in 3 arcmin steps
  • Gives gross FOV changes and locates edges of FOV
    for relative boresight calibrations to SAM and
    AIA guide telescope
  • FOV Maps 10 arcmin in 5 arcmin steps (5x5 map)
  • Gives finer FOV changes over nominal FOV pointing
    area (with margin)
  • Also get bonus mapping when AIA and HMI require
    maneuvers (though their mappings are different
    and not optimized for EVE needs).
  • Annual Rocket Underflights
  • Fly prototype instruments on sounding rocket
    periodically.
  • Calibrate rocket instruments at NIST before and
    after flight to transfer best calibration to EVE.

14
Cross-calibrationAIA-EVE,SDO-everybody else
15
Overview AIA/EVE cross-calibration
  • Spectral response ?(?) (effective area) of AIA
    channels determined by component-level
    calibration measurements
  • Mirrors (primary determination of bandpass)
  • Filters
  • CCDs
  • System-level effects
  • Estimated BOL relative calibration accuracy for
    AIA is 15
  • Absolute calibration is more difficult
  • Calibration will change due to contamination,
    degradation, etc.
  • Therefore, cross-calibration with EVE is highly
    desireable
  • First-order cross-calibration procedure
  • Use EVE MEGS-A measurements of full-disk solar
    spectral irradiance to predict a full-disk count
    rate in each AIA channel
  • Compare EVE-predicted count rate with AIAs
    measured full-disk count rate, and produce a
    scaling factor for each channel

16
Refining the Cross-calibration
  • First-order calibration should be easy to
    implement, but a few questions remain
  • What cadence? (yearly? monthly? daily? 10
    seconds?)
  • How do we interpret the resulting scale factors?
  • Contamination?
  • Something else?
  • or is it just an empirical correction, and we
    dont worry about it?
  • There are some potential pitfalls to the
    first-order AIA-EVE cross-calibration
  • Field of view
  • Spectral resolution
  • Bandpass uncertainty

17
Field of View
  • AIA field of view is 41 arc-minutes (to edge of
    CCD) / 46 arc-minutes (vignetting circle)
  • 1.3-2.0 pressure scale heights (at T 3.0 MK)
  • Based on Yohkoh observations, we estimate that
    AIA will observe 96 of the total coronal
    radiance
  • Higher fraction for lower-temperature lines
  • Depends on size and location of particular
    structures

18
Spectral Resolution
  • Spectral resolution of 1 Å results in
    calibration errors
  • Less than 1 for longer-wavelength (broad)
    channels
  • Up to 25 for 171 and 94 Å
  • Can be corrected by modeling higher-resolution
    spectrum

Simulated full-disk spectrum (10 AR, 90 QS)
shown in blue. Blurred with 1 Å FWHM gaussian and
binned at 6 pixels/Å in black. Response of AIA
194 channel shown in red. Folding the black
spectrum through the red instrument response
results in errors of 1-25 compared to using the
blue spectrum.
19
Bandpass Uncertainty
  • First-order cross-calibration only allows us to
    correct the overall scale of the AIA response
    functions
  • Uncertainties in the bandpass shape are more
    important can we use EVE to correct those?

Measurements of the MSSTA multilayers. This is
not data from an AIA telescope, but the
illustration of bandpass variations over the
mirror surface is relevant. See the poster by R.
Soufli et al.
20
Questions (1 of 3)
  • For AIA-EVE cross-calibration
  • How often should we perform "first-order"
    calibration?
  • What data products are necessary for this
    cross-calibration?
  • What sort of operational coordination is
    necessary? Coordination with rocket underflights?
  • How do we interpret the resulting scaling
    factors?
  • contamination?
  • something else?
  • not at all?
  • How do we deal with the field-of-view
    discrepancy?
  • How do we use EVE to correct the bandpass shape
    of the AIA?
  • To what extent will cross-calibrations rely on
    spectral modeling?
  • What improvements in spectral modeling can be
    made to enhance calibration accuracy?
  • Can AIA-EVE cross-calibration be used to
    constrain Fe abundance?
  • What role can DEM extraction from AIA play in
    cross-calibration, and extending the spectral
    range of EVE?

21
Questions (2 of 3)
  • For EIS-AIA-EVE inter-calibration
  • How does EIS-AIA cross-calibration feed back into
    AIA-EVE cross-calibration?
  • Is it possible to get full-disk spectra with EIS?
  • If not, how do we cross-calibrate with EVE?
  • If so, how can we coordinate this
    cross-calibration?
  • Will it be possible to cross-calirbate EIS with
    the LASP rocket this year?
  • For XRT-EVE cross-calibration
  • Can the EVE SAM and ESP be used to
    cross-calibrate with XRT?
  • Would this be useful?
  • What sort of coordination is necessary? How often
    should this be done? etc.
  • Can XRT and AIA be cross-calibrated? How? (Using
    DEM extraction?)

22
Questions (3 of 3)
  • Are TRACE and EIT going to be observing during
    SDO?
  • If so, how do we cross-calibrate with AIA?
  • If not, how do we establish continuity between
    the AIA dataset and the EIT/TRACE datasets?
  • How important is this cross-calibration?
  • For AIA, how important is it to have accurate
  • Absolute calibration?
  • Relative calibration (channel-to-channel)?
  • Bandpass shape calibration?

23
Backup Slides
24
EVE and AIA Inter-Calibrations
  • EVE spectra can be convolved with AIA bandpasses
    and compared with integrated images to transfer
    an absolute irradiance calibration from EVE to
    AIA.
  • Whats needed for this transfer?
  • AIA bandpasses (!)
  • AIA image conversion to irradiance
  • EVE irradiances
  • Can EVE be used to track changing AIA bandpasses?
  • Probably, but how the bleep do we do that?
  • Logistical Questions
  • Do AIA and EVE integrations need to be
    coincident?
  • Do special data products need to be made for
    inter-calibrations?
  • How frequently should comparisons be done?
  • Are there special calibration activities on-orbit
    that should be planned? In conjunction with
    rocket underflights?

25
Action Items from EVE Science Workshop (Nov, 2005)
26
Comments from EVE Science Workshop (Nov, 2005)
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