Photometric Systems and Calibration
A photometric system is a defined set of passbands together with a network of standard stars that fixes the zero point and color scale onto which measurements are transformed.
Definition
Photometric calibration is the procedure of converting raw instrumental counts into standardized magnitudes by determining extinction coefficients, color transformations, and zero points relative to observed standard stars.
Scope
This topic covers the definition of broadband and intermediate-band filter systems, the role of standard-star catalogs in fixing magnitude zero points, and the transformation equations that map instrumental measurements onto a standard system after correcting for atmospheric extinction, color terms, and detector response. It includes both Vega-based and AB magnitude conventions.
Core questions
- What defines a photometric passband, and how do broadband systems such as UBVRI differ from intermediate-band systems?
- How are extinction coefficients, color terms, and zero points derived from observations of standard stars?
- How do Vega-based and AB magnitude systems differ in their definition of zero point?
Key theories
- Transformation equations
- Instrumental magnitudes are mapped onto a standard system through linear relations involving an extinction coefficient times airmass, a color term times an object color, and a zero-point offset.
- Standard-star network
- Carefully measured, non-variable stars distributed across the sky anchor the magnitude scale, allowing different observers and instruments to be brought onto a common system.
Clinical relevance
Reliable system transformation lets observations from different telescopes, epochs, and detectors be combined into homogeneous catalogs, which is essential for comparing stellar colors with model atmospheres and for cross-survey science.
History
The Johnson-Morgan UBV system of the 1950s established the dominant broadband framework, later extended to redder bands and supplemented by Landolt's equatorial standard-star fields that became the de facto reference for CCD-era calibration.
Related topics
Seminal works
- johnsonMorgan1953
- landolt1992
- sterkenManfroid1992
Frequently asked questions
- What is a color term?
- A color term accounts for the fact that an instrument's passband does not exactly match the standard passband, so the offset between instrumental and standard magnitude depends on the object's color and must be calibrated out.
- Why use standard stars at all?
- Standard stars have agreed magnitudes and colors, so observing them through the same atmosphere and instrument provides the anchor points needed to transform any target onto the standard scale.