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Overview

The new IR inverse sensitivities are based on observations of the four white dwarf standard stars, namely GD153, G191B2B, GD71, GRW+70D5824, and the G-type star,  P330E,  collected between 2009 and 2019. Changes relative to the 2012 values are described below.

New 2020 solution:

  • Models: Models for the CALSPEC standard white dwarfs were improved and the Vega reference flux was increased (Bohlin et al. 2020). As a consequence, the standard white dwarf fluxes increase ~1.5% in the range 1-1.6 micron covered by the IR detector.
  • Flat fields:  the updated 'pixel to pixel' flats correct for spatial sensitivity residuals up to 0.5% in the center of the detector and up to 2% at the edges (ISR 2021-01).  A new set of 'delta' flats correct for low-sensitivity artifacts known as 'blobs' in six filters (F098M, F105W, F110W, F125W, F140W, and F160W), as new blobs appear over time (ISR 2021-10).

IR Inverse Sensitivity (Zeropoint) Tables

2020 values:

Please note that we only provide values for an infinite aperture of radius 6 arcsec.

Accordion

 

Infrared Repeatability

The repeatability of photometric measurements stars over the course of one to a handful of orbits is found to be approximately +/- 1.5%, despite Poisson noise terms being quite a bit smaller than 1%.  This is due to self persistence from previous images in the visit, and can be mitigated by dithering, by at least 10 pixels between exposures, to ensure that stars do not fall on the same pixels.  Using this dither strategy, stars with very small Poisson noise components achieve repeatability of approximately 0.5%.  More information can be found in ISR 2019-07. In addition, ISR 2021-05 examined spatial scans in the open cluster M35 to further assess the photometric repeatability of the IR detector.

 

GD153-F160W

Figure 1: Aperture photometry measurements of the spectrophotometric standard star GD153 measured over several years by WFC3/IR in the F160W filter. The 1.00 line on the y axis corresponds to the median value FLT measurements. Each point represents a single exposure of the star, and the various colors/colorbar represent the exposure time of the observation. The error bars are the computed Poisson and background error of the photometry (and does not include other noise terms such as calibration uncertainty). Note that a large majority of this data did not use the dithering strategy discussed above. Plot from ISR 2020-10.

Count-rate non-linearity

Previous analyses have shown that WFC3-IR suffers a count-rate dependent non-linearity of about 1% per dex, an order of magnitude smaller than the prior HgCdTe detector, NICMOS, flown on HST, but large enough to potentially limit the accuracy of photometry. In Riess et al. 2019 (ISR 2019-01) we present new and more precise measurements of count-rate non-linearity (CRNL) through a combination of comparisons of cluster star photometry between WFC3-IR and WFC3-UVIS and by using observed and synthetic magnitudes of white dwarfs. We further extend the measured range of CRNL to higher count rates by comparing magnitudes between the ground and WFC3-IR for LMC and Milky Way Cepheids. Combining these results with all previous measurements and those from the WFC3 grism provides a consistent and improved characterization of the CRNL of WF3-IR, of 0.75% +/- 0.06% per dex, with no apparent wavelength dependence, measured across 16 astronomical magnitudes. To illustrate the value of the precision reached for the CRNL, we show it is sufficient to compare the photometry of sources along a distance ladder calibrated by Gaia parallaxes and produce a 1% determination of the Hubble constant.

Due to the difficulty of measuring CRNL for WFC3-IR on orbit, a broad set of approaches have been used. The initial, on-orbit calibration of CRNL was produced by Riess (2010) who compared the magnitudes of stars in clusters between two overlapping passbands, one from an instrument without CRNL (the CCDs of ACS WFC) or corrected for CRNL (NICMOS) and WFC3-IR.

In Riess et al. (2019) we present additional sets of measurements which provide greater precision in the on-orbit determination of the WFC3-IR CRNL. First we present new measurements comparing cluster star magnitudes in bands where CCD’s overlap with WFC3-IR, F850LP, and F098M using a combination of deep and shallow frames to extend the dynamic range. We also provide calibrations of the CRNL at brighter magnitudes (F160W=6-14) using comparisons between the ground and WFC3-IR of the photometry of Cepheids in the Large Magenallanic Cloud and the Milky Way. We then use an independent approach where we compare the near-infrared photometry of hot, DA White Dwarf (WD) to models constrained by optical measurements.

We find the CRNL in WFC3-IR to be 0.0077 +/- 0.0008 mag/dex (or 0.0075 +/- 0.006 mag/dex including the grism measurements), characterized over 16 magnitudes with no apparent wavelength dependence and independent corroboration. This result is consistent with the initial determination by Riess (2010) of 0.010 +/- 0.002 mag/dex but the present results are much more precise. This result may be used to correct IR photometry by using the difference in apparent flux (in dex) between where the WFC3-IR zeropoint is set (~12th mag) and the target source (fainter sources appear even fainter and thus are corrected to be brighter).

 

Count-Rate Non-Linearity 1
Figure 2: A summary of the CRNL for WFC3-IR photometry measured over 16 astronomical magnitudes from various sources described in the text.​​​​

 

Count-Rate Non-Linearity 2
Figure 3: Magnitude ladder used to measure the CRNL for WFC3 over 16 astronomical magnitudes. Bottom plot shows residuals from the best fit 0.0077 +/- 0.0008 mag/dex result presented in Riess et al. (2019).

 

Calibration History

Delivery Calibration Reference File Description Change Documentation
           

Nov 19, 2012

First IMPHTTAB for IR

(infinite)

wbj1825ri_imp.fits HSTCAL replaces calls to STSDAS/synphot in calwf3 to populate PHOT keywords  

HSTCAL Github Repository

Mar 06, 2012

Revised Zeropoints (Infinite and 3 pix)

 

Filter-dependent correction

GD153, GD71, G191B2B, P330E

Master DRZ frames, per filter

 

Webpage link

ISR 2011-08: The Photometric Performance of WFC3/IR: Temporal Stability Through Year 1

Dec 7, 2010

In-flight Flats u*pfl.fits

Ground flats corrected by a 'grey' delta-flat

Computed from average sky flat for all filters

+/- 2% correction

ISR 2011-11: Sky Flats: Generating Improved WFC3 IR Flat-fields

Nov 10, 2009

In-flight EE  

F098M, F105W and F160W

Other filters from optical models

 

ISR 2009-37: WFC3 SMOV Programs 11437/9: IR On-orbit PSF Evaluation

Nov 18, 2009

In-flight Zeropoints (infinite)

 

Polynomial correction with wavelength

GD 153, P330E

FLT*PAM

10-15% higher sensitivity than ground test data

ISR 2009-30: WFC3 SMOV Proposal 11451: The Photometric Performance and Calibration of WFC3/IR

Dec 10, 2008 Ground Flats s*pfl.fits Thermal vacuum data   ISR 2008-28: WFC3 IR Ground P-Flats
Last Updated: 08/14/2024

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