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Chandra Calibration Status  Gain correction files for epochs 35 (Aug. – Oct. 2008) and 36 (Nov. 2008 - Jan.2009) were released in CALDB versions 4.1.0.

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Presentation on theme: "Chandra Calibration Status  Gain correction files for epochs 35 (Aug. – Oct. 2008) and 36 (Nov. 2008 - Jan.2009) were released in CALDB versions 4.1.0."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chandra Calibration Status  Gain correction files for epochs 35 (Aug. – Oct. 2008) and 36 (Nov. 2008 - Jan.2009) were released in CALDB versions 4.1.0 and 4.1.2. There have been 3 CALDB releases since the last CUC meeting CALDB 4.1.0 Dec. 15, 2008 CALDB 4.1.1 Jan. 21, 2009 CALDB 4.1.2 Mar. 27, 2009.  HRMA encircled energy fraction released in CALDB 4.1.0 for use with mkpsfmap.  Updated HRMA effective area released in CALDB 4.1.1 HRMA ACIS HETG  Updated HETG transmission efficiencies were released in CALDB 4.1.1

2 Two corrections were applied to the predictions of the raytrace code before CALDB 4.1.1 Empirical XRCF correction HRMA overlayer of 22A Updated HRMA Effective Area

3 Re-Analysis of the Ground-Based (XRCF) Data HETG Continuum Measurement SSD Continuum Measurement

4 Empirical Correction to Updated HRMA Effective Area

5 XMM-Newton / Chandra Cross-Calibration

6  Do the mirror shutters block a greater fraction of the beam than presently predicted by the raytrace code – Analysis of HSI ring focus images show that the shutters reduce the throughput of the mirrors by at most 1%.  Is a greater fraction of the beam scattered beyond the 2mm pinholes used for effective area than presently predicted by the raytrace code – The measured 2mm/35mm flux ratio is consistent with the predictions of the raytrace code below 2 keV and is approximately 3% less than the value predicted by the raytrace code at 6 keV.  Improve the pile-up correction for the SSD continuum measurements.  Investigate the discrepancy between FPC and SSD measurements. Current HRMA Calibration

7 HIS Ring Focus Images

8  Improve the pile-up correction for the SSD continuum measurements.  Investigate the discrepancy between FPC and SSD measurements. Measured FPC 2mm/35mm flux ratio vs. energy

9 Update on the ACIS Contamination Model ACIS Calibration Status

10 Spectrum of ECS L-Complex F-K edge

11 ECS data fit with the old and new spectral model for the L-complex Old Spectral Model New Spectral Model

12 Decline in ECS Flux with Time

13 Optical depth of the contaminant at 700 eV on ACIS-S

14 Optical depth of the contaminant at 700 eV on ACIS-I

15 Revised HETG Efficiencies CALDB 4.1.1

16 HRC-I/ACIS Cross-Calibration with Updated HRMA Model

17 HRC-S QE Re-Calibration  HRC-S 0.5-10keV QE calibrated and fine-tuned in- flight using LETG blazar continua  HRMA EA revision requires QE re-calibration  Account for: –HRMA EA changes –Accumulated in-flight data suggesting overly-hard power- law indices than HETG+ACIS by of order 5% –Will require relative QE correction between ~0.5-5keV of ~15% Complicated by: Spectral shape/intensity variability Parameter non-orthogonality Possible PL curvature LEG HEG MEG

18 CUC Calibration Wish List 1) Astrometric Calibration Do observers have ready access to any study of the astrometric calibration of the mission PSF tools, e.g. if a field of sources with well-known positions is both observed and simulated by the PSF tools, how well do the observed and simulated data sets line up? Astrometry - The overall 90% uncertainty in absolute positions is 0.6”. This is given on the CXC web pages and in the POG. The mean off-set between CSC and SDSS positions is 0.2” On-axis PSF - There are several on-line Chandra calibration workshop presentations as well as a discussion in the POG on this topic. The CSC Catalog Statistical Characterization memo shows that the uncertainties in relative astrometry for bright point sources is 0.2” within off-axis angles of 10’ and approximately 1” at larger off-axis angles. A study has begun to simulate a Chandra observation of the open star cluster NGC2516 with SAOTrace and then compare the x-ray source positions as determined by wavdetect with the optical positions.

19 2) ACIS Bad Pixel Table Data discarded via entries in the ACIS Bad Pixel Table (obviously) reduces the effective area of the mission. Currently, the standard Bad Pixel Table aggressively removes ACIS columns and is not necessarily appropriate for all kinds of ACIS science. Modifications to the ACIS Bad Pixel Table should pass through an approval process which includes consultation with the Users Committee. Several different ACIS Bad Pixel Tables, each optimized Data systems is revising the CIAO tool acis_build_pixel so the user has much more freedom in specifying the bad pixels.

20 3) RMFs and ARFs Users need the capability of creating RMFs and ARFs for user-selected grades. There are several benefits: - for bright piled-up sources filtering on only single events will in general reduce pileup - for faint non-piled-up sources a non-standard grade selection can increase effective area - for bright non-piled-up sources a non-standard grade selection may improve energy resolution. Since the Chandra beam is comparable to the size of an ACIS pixel, grade 0 events are not necessarily un piled-up. The standard grade set is 02346. In general, grades 1 and 5 add about 1-2% to the standard grade set. For soft sources, grade 7 is heavily dominated by charged particles. For photon energies greater than 6 keV, grade 7 events can add an additional 10% to the standard grade set, however the background rate is 75 times higher when including grade 7 events.

21 ACIS Flight Grades Grade 0 – single pixel Grade 1 – Diagonal split Grade 2 – vertical split Grades 3 and 4 - horizontal splits Grade 5 – L- shaped + corner Grade 6 – L shaped Grade 7 – everything else

22 Grade 0 fraction vs. count rate

23 E0102-72. ACIS-I3 ACIS-S3 Grade 02346 1 5 7

24 ECS Data

25 G21.5-09. ACIS-S3

26 E0102-72. ACIS-I3

27 Cas A. ACIS-S3ACIS-I3

28 4) ACIS Contamination Model 5) Soft Proton Contamination Proper statistical treatment of backgrounds requires a model of the background spectrum, but what is this for the soft proton contamination? In addition, what is the spatial distribution of the soft proton contamination? Is it uniform, or is it vignetted at all by the HRMA? The most common type of BI flare is very well-behaved, has a reproducible spectrum (a power law with an exponential cutoff (see Markevitch et al. 2003, ApJ 583, 70), and a spatial distribution that is non-uniform but energy-independent. These results were presented at the 2003 Chandra Calibration meeting ( http://cxc.harvard.edu/ccr/proceedings/03_proc/presentations/markevitch2/s005.html) http://cxc.harvard.edu/ccr/proceedings/03_proc/presentations/markevitch2/s005.h This information can be added to the CIAO thread for generating background images for extended sources. We can also provide a tool which will add in the background flare component in a blank sky image.


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