This page describes all Instrumental, Quality Control, and Pipeline
Issues that have arisen since the beginning of OmegaCAM operations on
Oct., 15, 2012.
Since the beginning of operations, detector ESO_CCD_82 has shown
gain variations of a few percent. This instability seems to have
worsened beginning from 2012-05-01 (P89). At its worst, detector #82
can show strong horizontal striping. There does not appear to be a
pattern to this misbehaviour and it appears and disappears within
short frames of time.
This has been solved by replacing a video board within OmegaCAM,
but resulted in a sharp increase in the read-out noise and bias levels
of the four detectors adjacent to #82.
Detector #82 is monitored in all health check plots that include
the parameters from each individual detector, but a detailed
monitoring of CCD #82 is also done for both its bias level and its
flux response shown in these links (in each case CCD #82 is directly
compared to more stable detectors):
raw bias level (detector #82)
read-out noise (detector #82)
dome flat flux (detector #82)
2011-10-15 to Present: Vignetting of the composite
filters
A number of OmegaCAM filters consist of four segments (each
covering 8 detectors). As such, they are have a central cross-shaped
support structure. This creates a vignetting effect that will be
visible in 20 detectors which is significantly larger than the gaps
present between adjacent CCDs. This should be considered when chosing
a dither pattern. The affected filters are:
B_JOHN
V_JOHN
H_ALPHA
NB_659
NB_852
The vignetting present in the composite
filters (from the left): B_JOHN, V_JOHN, H_ALPHA, NB_659.
A conservative accounting for the total size of the vignetted area can be summarized as:
Filter |
North/South Vignetting |
East/West Vignetting |
B_JOHN |
1405 pixels (300 arcsec) |
1405 pixels (300 arcsec) |
V_JOHN |
1430 pixels (306 arcsec) |
1410 pixels (302 arcsec) |
H_ALPHA |
1418 pixels (305 arcsec) |
1407 pixels (302 arcsec) |
NB_659 |
1418 pixels (305 arcsec) |
1407 pixels (302 arcsec) |
2011-10-15 to Present: Polar field composite filter
(u_g_r_i_SDSS) has no flux in dome flats
Owing to a relatively red lamp spectrum, and the sensitivity of the g,
r, and i segments, the dome flats of the u_g_r_i_SDSS composite polar
field filter have virtually zero flux in the u-band quadrant. It
therefore makes sense to only use the u_g_r_i_SDSS twilight flats to
processes the data taken with this filter.
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A raw dome flat with the u_g_r_i_SDSS filter. The
insufficient flux level of the u-band quadrant (top right)
is evident.
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The flux levels are typically:
Filter |
Typical flux level (ADU) |
r |
44,000 - 48,000 |
i |
50,000 - 55,000 |
g |
12,000 - 14,000 |
u |
300 - 800 |
2011-08-01 to 2011-10-20: Field rotation jumps (now solved!)
From the beginning of OmegaCAM/VST commissioning to mid October,
2011 there appeared to be random jumps in the rotation of the field of
as much as 2 degrees. This problem is now solved, and has not affected
data post October 20, 2011.
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A plot of the rotation angle (in degrees) vs. date for
secondary standard fields taken between August and October
2011. The random jumps in field rotation angle are apparent
up to the end of October.
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A zoom of the above plot of the rotation angle (in
degrees) vs. date for secondary standard fields taken
between December 2011 and February 2012. The absence of a
random jumps in field rotation angle shows that this issue
has been solved.
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Commissioning to Present: Fringing
The blue-sensitive EEV detectors of OmegaCAM are very susceptible
to fringing. This is evident in both the i_SDSS and, in particular,
the z_SDSS filters. When the data is observed under good atmospheric
conditions (photometric -> clear), the fringing is relatively stable
and can be corrected by creating science frame-based superflats and
scaling and subtracting these from the science images.
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A particularly strong example of z-band fringing visible
on a single OmegaCAM detector.
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Commissioning to Present: Cross-Talk
Detector cross-talk (the situation whereby the signal from one
detector can find its way into a neighbouring detector) can exist for
OmegaCAM CCDs numbered ESO_CCD_94, 95, and 96. It manifests itself
most clearly by bright sources in detector 95 being mirrored as
inverted (or negative) sources in detector 96. The sources need not
be saturated to create a cross-talk image in a neighbouring
detector. The cross-talk image is usually less than or equal to 0.4 percent
the brightness of its parent source.
ESO_CCD_95 and ESO_CCD_96
Evidence of cross-talk: Bright sources (shown with black circles) in
detector #95 are mirrored as negative sources (shown with blue
circles) in the neighbouring detector #96.
Commissioning to Present: Ghosting Around Bright Sources
Multiple reflections in the internal optics of OmegaCAM can produce
complex image rings and ghosts near very bright sources. It is
important to note that reflections can be visible even if the source
star is placed in the gap between detectors.
Internal reflections surrounding a very bright star in a single detector image obtained with the V_JOHN filter.
More insidious are the internal reflections that result from a bright star that is off the frame, yet produces reflective structures within a given detector.
Commissioning to Present: Structure in Bias Frames
Two OmegaCAM detectors (ESO_CCD_68 and 90) show a centrally
elevated structure in their bias frames. This structure, however,
remains constant with the underlying bias level and can be easily
corrected.
QC reports for the bias frames of detectors #68 (top panel) and #90 (bottom panel). Each shows the master bias frame (left) with its central ridge structure and the difference frame (reference - current master bias) showing the stability of this structure (third frame from left). The number of hot pixels are elevated at the brightest part of the central ridge structure (last frame in each panel).
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