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Calibration of the NOMAD-UVIS data

Authors :
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
European Commission
Belgian Science Policy Office
Willame, Yannick
Depiesse, Cédric
Mason, Jonathon P.
Thomas, Ian R.
Patel, Manish R.
Hathi, Brijen
Leese, Mark R.
Bolsée, David
Wolff, Michael J.
Trompet, Loïc
Vandaele, Ann Carine
Piccialli, Arianna
Aoki, Shohei
Ristic, Bojan
Neefs, Eddy
Beeckman, Bram
Berkenbosch, Sophie
Clairquin, Roland
Mahieux, Arnaud
Pereira, Nuno
Robert, Séverine
Viscardy, Sébastien
Wilquet, Valérie
Daerden, Frank
López-Moreno, José Juan
Bellucci, Giancarlo
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
European Commission
Belgian Science Policy Office
Willame, Yannick
Depiesse, Cédric
Mason, Jonathon P.
Thomas, Ian R.
Patel, Manish R.
Hathi, Brijen
Leese, Mark R.
Bolsée, David
Wolff, Michael J.
Trompet, Loïc
Vandaele, Ann Carine
Piccialli, Arianna
Aoki, Shohei
Ristic, Bojan
Neefs, Eddy
Beeckman, Bram
Berkenbosch, Sophie
Clairquin, Roland
Mahieux, Arnaud
Pereira, Nuno
Robert, Séverine
Viscardy, Sébastien
Wilquet, Valérie
Daerden, Frank
López-Moreno, José Juan
Bellucci, Giancarlo
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The Ultraviolet and VIsible Spectrometer (UVIS), covering the 200–650 ​nm range, is one of three spectrometers that comprise the NOMAD instrument on the ExoMars 2016 Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO). UVIS can operate in solar occultation, nadir and limb viewing mode and was designed to monitor ozone and aerosols in the Martian atmosphere. Here, we describe the calibration procedure to convert the UVIS raw data into a calibrated data product ready for scientific exploitation. The calibration includes the CCD offset and dark current subtraction, the wavelength assignment, the noise identification and removal, the smearing removal, and the radiance or transmittance conversion. A straylight correction, critical for some parts of the UVIS spectral range, is also applied during the data reduction process, which is described in more detail in two companion papers [Mason et al., 2022; Depiesse et al., In prep] corresponding to two different and independent methods giving consistent results. The solar occultation observations are converted into transmittance and are therefore self-calibrating, while nadir and limb measurements require an absolute radiometric calibration. A comparison with coincident nadir MRO/MARCI measurements is provided as a final validation and generally shows a ±10% agreement on the radiances measured by both instruments. © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1373148824
Document Type :
Electronic Resource