ALFOSC spectroscopy countrates

Below the observed peak wide-slit count rates in electrons per second in the extracted spectrum for an mV=10 star using NOT+ALFOSC+CCD#7.
grismblue mV=10 starred mV=10 starpeak efficiency peak aresolution bdispersion
star IDper pixelper [Â]star IDper pixel per [Â][Â][Â/15µ]
3 1 460021005 27001150 22% 4600 690 2.3
4 2 560019004 41001350 28% 5200 710 3.0
5 3 380012506 41001350 27% 6400 830 3.1
6 2 290021004 16001100 22% 4600 980 1.5
7 2 260018004 19001300 26% 5200 1300 1.5
8 2 110010504 13001150 24% 6200 2000 1.3
10 11550024005 88001350 26% 4700 210 6.5
11 11060022005 75001550 30% 5200 380 4.8
12 11440011005158001200 27% 6700 19013
14 3 270019506 16001150 21% 4600 1200 1.4
15 3 480015506 34001100 21% 5200 650 3.1
echelle modepeak efficiency peak aresolution bdispersion
[Â][Â/15µ]
g9 + g10 10%52004500 @ 5000Â
3900 @ 7500Â
0.4 @ 5000Â
0.7 @ 7500Â
g13 + order sorter 14%54003700 0.5
g13 + g10 12%52004300 @ 4050Â
3700 @ 5250Â
0.35 @ 4050Â
0.5 @ 5250Â
Click on the waveband to obtain a transmission curve.
Click on the star ID to obtain a curve of countrate per extracted pixel scaled to mV=10.
Click here to get detailed info on the available grisms.

Notes
a) Wavelength of peak in efficiency curve.
b) With a 0.5" slit. Note that CCD#7 suffers from charge smearing and that consequently 2-pixel resolution cannot always be achieved.
 

Listed below are the spectral standard stars used for determining the throughput and system efficiency.
star ID blue stars spectral type visual magnitude
1 sp0644+375 DA 12.1
2 sp1045+378 O9V 7.0
3 sp2032+248 DA 11.6
star ID red stars spectral type visual magnitude
4 sp0305+261 sdF 8.0
5 sp0946+139 sdF 8.3
6 sp1446+259 sdF 9.7

 

Slit losses for point sources

Listed below is the expected slit transmission for point sources, as a function of the ratio of slit width over seeing FWHM.
slit width / seeing 0.4 0.5 0.751.0 1.3 1.8 2.5
slit transmission0.350.430.650.76 0.880.961.00

 

Spatial scale and read-out noise

The spatial scale for ALFOSC+CCD#7 is about 0.19 arcsec/pixel.
The read-out noise of CCD#7 is 5 to 6 electrons.
 

Sky brightness

ING technical note 115: La Palma night-sky brightness Chris Benn (Isaac Newton Group) and Sara Ellison (Univ. of Kent), May 1998

Darkest La Palma sky: U=22, B=22.7, V=21.9, R=21.0, I=20 (high elevation, high ecliptic and galactic latitude, at sunspot minimum). Moonlight brightens the sky by about 1 mag (first/last quarter) to 4 mag (full moon) in UBV. In I the full moon brightens the sky about 2 mag.
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