Calibration Products

Calibration Products

Please send any comments and updates to: dd@space.mit.edu.

Go to HETG at XRCF


Overview

The purpose of this document is to describe the various "calibration products" that are involved in the HETGS calibration. This section provides a general overview to the products, the next sections provide more specific descriptions of the types of products and the HETGS products themselves.

Calibration Data is the starting point for all calibration activities.

These data can be analyzed to produce specific results, or Calibration Measurement Products.

Calibration synthesis activites will then examine, understand, and cross-check the various Calibration Measurement Products to produce a set of well-defined Calibration Interface Products that faithfully describe the instruments and can be used by others (e.g., for data analysis, ray-trace simulation, proposal planning, etc.).

A sub-set of these CIPs will be Fundamental Calibration Products that are used as a starting point to calculate the other products in a relatively automatic fashion.

Finally, it is useful to explicitly identify those data that are needed by the ASC Data System for data analysis - these are called Analysis Reference Data.

A graphical expression of these ideas is given below:

Cal Interface Products sketch


Definitions: Types of "Calibration Products"

Calibration Data

These are raw data taken at sub-assembly, at XRCF, in flight. They are just data (counts, spot location, event file, etc.). Of course they are the basis of the calibration. Error estimates are an important ingredient of the data.

Calibration Measurement Products

These products cover many levels of complexity and represent the results when the raw data have been "analyzed" to create something, for example:

There are lots of these! And their meaning and organization and synthesis can require a lot of human knowledge. Many results may be ammenable to database storage, others may require memos to describe and define them. Again, error estimates are produced for each result as well.

Fundamental Calibration Products

The wealth of calibration measurement results must be sythesized, resolved (e.g., synchrotron witness vs. reflectivity lab vs. XRCF effective area predictions), distilled, and captured (along with error bars) into some finite comprehensive well-defined set of data that serves to model the component.

For example, for the HETG, there will be a fundamental set of data at the grating facet level that will predict/describe the instrument when combined with similar data/models for the other system components. Initially "filled" with sub-assembly data, we need to develop ways to "perturb" these fundamental products to have a best agreemement with sub-assembly, XRCF, and eventually flight calibration data.

Or, for the HRMA, the Fundamental Calibration Product is the combination of the SAOSAC models of figure plus scattering plus Ir reflectivity models--these make up the most fundamental HRMA model and any "tweaking" to it will probably happen in this context.

Calibration Interface Products

The "problem" with these fundamental calibration products is that they are usually not what we want for many applications. So, for example, the facet-by-facet efficiencies are turned into shell-by-shell efficiencies that are combined with mirror shell-by-shell reflectivity and areas and combined with ACIS-S chip quantum efficiencies and geometry to finally produce the HETGS First-order effective area vs energy.

"Calibration Interface Products" are well-defined, generally useful, products that are derrived from the fundamental calibration products (often from more than a single component). Requiring an understanding of the fundamental calibration products, these interface products are best generated under Cal and IPI guidance and/or s/w.

Analysis Reference Data

The last set of data that we generally put under the term "calibration products" are the very specific parameters and files that the ASC data system analysis software will use. These are dictated by the analysis algorithms (is a 2D PSF matrix desired? is an EE curve needed?) and by the analysis software formats and standards (FITS file? ASCII? binary? compressed? portable?). These formats are dictated by the analysis algorithms and software architecture; i.e., their requirements are produced by SDS. Calibration activities can then help with the "filling-in" of the actual values of the data.


Archiving Products

These products will be stored in the ASC archive. Thus there is a single source for the values. The values are also revision controlled so that changes (improvements) can be incorporated. Some values may be time dependant and the archive can handle that as well.

Reading .rdb Files

Most of the data files/tables are in a simple ASCII tab-delimited rdb format. The IDL procedure rdb_read.pro can be used to read in these data.


HETG Calibration Products

HETG Calibration Data

Types of HETG calibration data:

HETG Calibration Measurement Products

Types of HETG calibration measurement products:

HETG Fundamental Calibration Products (FCPs)

Given i) the variation among the HETG facets in both period variations and efficiency, ii) the misaligned gratings and iii) the fact that different azimuths of the HRMA scatter in different directions it is reasonable to have the fundamental products for the HETG at the grating level.

The sub-assembly data are naturally at this level. A key calibration task will be to use XRCF results to adjust and issue updated values for these products (e.g., including scatter, adjusting efficiency).

The HETG FCPs, then, include the following:

memo: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/hess/basic.html
data: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/hess/HESSbuilt.rdb
  • HESS as built: location and orientation in space of facets and their dispersion directions. Currently this is identical to HESSdesign.rdb; in future HESSbuilt.rdb will be produced once XRCF analysis of mis-aligned gratings is complete.

memo: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/hess/gratings.html
data: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/hess/HETGgratings.rdb
  • facet average period and dp/p rms values, in "LR Angstroms".

memo: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/effic/sub_ass_effic.html
data: HETG_shellN_multi.rdb files
  • each facet: diffraction efficiency (E,m) model parameters for X-GEF tested regions

FCPs in development:

HETG Calibration Interface Products (CIPs)

The fundamental HETG data above can be processed to produce several useful CIPs that do not (or not strongly) depend on information about other components. Each CIP set of data has a corresponding memo which describes how the values were produced. The HETG CIPs available are listed below:

memo: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/hess/basic.html
data: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/hess/HETGbasic.rdb ('LETGbasic.rdb)
  • HETG Rowland Diameter (NOT Rowland spacing!)
  • Effective ring radii (shell)
  • HETG vignetting term (shell)

memo: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/period/period.html
data: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/period/HETGperiod.rdb ('LETGperiod.rdb)
  • HEG, MEG effective average period
  • HETG Rowland spacing (X/F)
  • HETG opening angle (X/F)
  • HETG mean dispersion angle (X/F)
  • HEG, MEG angles (X,F)

memo: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/core/core.html
data: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/core/HETGcore.rdb ('LETGcore.rdb)
  • HEG, MEG dp/p rms
  • HEG, MEG roll rms

memo: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/effic/effic.html
data format: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/effic/HETG_shellX_effic.rdb
The above .rdb file is an example of the efficiency format. The full set of 14 data and error files are available at MIT in /nfs/spectra/d6/CIP/ and below as gzip'ed rdb files:
ShellData FileError File
1 HETG_shell1_effic.rdb.gz HETG_shell1_effic_err.rdb.gz
3 HETG_shell3_effic.rdb.gz HETG_shell3_effic_err.rdb.gz
4 HETG_shell4_effic.rdb.gz HETG_shell4_effic_err.rdb.gz
6 HETG_shell6_effic.rdb.gz HETG_shell6_effic_err.rdb.gz
MEG MEG_effic.rdb.gz MEG_effic_err.rdb.gz
HEG HEG_effic.rdb.gz HEG_effic_err.rdb.gz
HETG HETG_effic.rdb.gz HETG_effic_err.rdb.gz
ShellData FileError File
1 LETG_shell1_effic.rdb.gz LETG_shell1_effic_err.rdb.gz
3 LETG_shell3_effic.rdb.gz LETG_shell3_effic_err.rdb.gz
4 LETG_shell4_effic.rdb.gz LETG_shell4_effic_err.rdb.gz
6 LETG_shell6_effic.rdb.gz LETG_shell6_effic_err.rdb.gz
LETG LETG_effic.rdb.gz LETG_effic_err.rdb.gz
  • HETG efficiency (E, m, shell)
  • HEG, MEG effective efficiency (E, m, HEG/MEG)
  • HETG effective efficiency (E, m)

memo: see Section 9.3.5, MARX Parameters, of the HETG Ground Calibration report.
data: see marx.par
These parameters are a good example of CIPs that are created from other CIPs.
  • HETG MARX parameters
  • LETG MARX parameters

memo: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/lrf/lrf.html
data: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/lrf/HETGlrf.rdb
These CIPs represent advanced Line Response Function effects that are not yet (Aug.97) in a form for release ("hopeless but not serious" as Peter Predehl would say!).
  • HEG, MEG dp/p distribution
  • HEG scattering contribution
  • MEG mis-aligned gratings


Other Calibration Interface Products

To carry out XRCF data analysis and to create flight HETGS CIPs, we need CIPs from the HRMA, ACIS, HRC, Aspect system, and XRCF-specific information. These are listed below. Note that these .rdb files represent a synthesis of the complete calibration process for these components; links with more details are given when available.
[Summary plots in ( )'s below were made with cip_other_plots.pro.]

HRMA CIPs (hrma.ps)

For off-axis, defocussed:

ACIS CIPs (acis.ps)

HRC CIPs ( HRC Calibration link), (hrc1.ps, hrc2.ps )

Aspect Information (DOSS page (ASC internal only))

XRCF-specific Information


HETGS Calibration Products

HETGS Calibration Interface Products (CIPs)

It is useful to define and create CIPs for the complete HETGS by using the FCPs/CIPs of the HETG, HRMA, ACIS, and including the Rowland Geometry and Aspect effects. Most of these are "facility dependent": that is different for XRCF and for Flight, so an XRCF and a Flight set of these is implied.

memo: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/res_power/res_power.html
data: see table below
ConfigurationFlight Resolving Power
MEG specification MEG_res_cei.rdb
HEG specification HEG_res_cei.rdb
LEG specification LEG_res_cei.rdb
MEG realistic/conservative MEG_res_con.rdb
HEG realistic/conservative HEG_res_con.rdb
LEG realistic/conservative LEG_res_con.rdb
MEG realistic/optimistic MEG_res_opt.rdb
HEG realistic/optimistic HEG_res_opt.rdb
LEG realistic/optimistic LEG_res_opt.rdb
  • HEG, MEG resolving power (E, m)


memo: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/eff_area/eff-area.html#ACIS
data: see table below
Detector, OrderHETGS(all)HETGS(MEG)HETGS(HEG)LETGS
ACIS-S, m=1 EA_HETG1-AS.rdb EA_MEG1-AS.rdb EA_HEG1-AS.rdb EA_LETG1-AS.rdb
ACIS-S, m=0 EA_HETG0-AS.rdb EA_MEG0-AS.rdb EA_HEG0-AS.rdb EA_LETG0-AS.rdb
ACIS-I, m=1 EA_HETG1-AI.rdb EA_MEG1-AI.rdb EA_HEG1-AI.rdb EA_LETG1-AI.rdb
ACIS-I, m=0 EA_HETG0-AI.rdb EA_MEG0-AI.rdb EA_HEG0-AI.rdb EA_LETG0-AI.rdb
  • HETGS, LETGS effective area (E, m, ACISmode, cross-disp-mode)

memo: http://space.mit.edu/HETG/eff_area/eff-area.html#HRC
data: see table below
Detector, OrderHETGS(all)HETGS(MEG)HETGS(HEG)LETGS
HRC-I, m=1 EA_HETG1-HI.rdb EA_MEG1-HI.rdb EA_HEG1-HI.rdb EA_LETG1-HI.rdb
HRC-I, m=0 EA_HETG0-HI.rdb EA_MEG0-HI.rdb EA_HEG0-HI.rdb EA_LETG0-HI.rdb
HRC-S, m=1 - - - EA_LETG1-HS.rdb*
HRC-S, m=0 - - - EA_LETG0-HS.rdb
*This file includes HRC-S spatial variation effects, see http://space.mit.edu/HETG/eff_area/eff_area.html#HRC
  • HETGS, LETGS effective area (E, m, HRC settings, cross-disp-mode)


Other HETGS CIPs not yet available:

In addition to the "on-axis, nominal focus" products, above, it may be useful (but perhaps beyond the calibration task) to generate products for the more general slightly-off-axis (< 30 arc seconds TBR), slightly defocussed (|dx| < 0.25 mm) case. These might include:



HETG-related Analysis Reference Data

Summary

This document focusses on the Calibration end of things, so the ARD is not detailed here - and just as well because SDS/DS is doing it... See for example: