Accurate PSF subtraction is a prime concern for an observer wishing to study faint features around bright objects. Typical situations are: a host galaxy harboring a bright quasar; circumstellar nebulosity around a bright
star; faint companions of a bright
star, etc. PSF subtraction for NICMOS data can be very effective, especially for images from cameras 1 and 2, thanks to a few important features of this instrument:
One way to get a high quality PSF for subtraction is to measure an isolated bright unsaturated
star in the same image or to construct a composite PSF using good
stars in the image. This can be accomplished using the
IRAF digiphot package as described in
A User’s Guide to Stellar CCD photometry with IRAF1. A PSF obtained from the same image ensures that effects of telescope focus and pointing jitter on the image quality are properly taken into account. In particular, this approach will take care of the
breathing effect: variations of focus position due to thermally induced mechanical displacements in the
HST optical path. One disadvantage of this method, however, is that it is difficult to account for positional variations in the PSF over the field of view of the NICMOS cameras (see discussion in
Section 5.2.3, and also in Suchkov & Galas 1998, NICMOS
ISR 98-005). Although these variations do not have a large affect on NICMOS aperture photometry, they can be large enough to cause problems for PSF matching and subtraction. If no suitable
star can be found in the image, one can resort to a synthetic PSF computed using
TinyTim.
There are a number of factors which affect the NICMOS PSF and thus can impact the results of image analysis relying on PSF subtraction. The factors are: focus variations due to OTA breathing, cold mask irregular motion (“wiggling”) on an orbital time scale, PSF color dependence.
The limits to the accuracy of PSF subtraction imposed by these factors have been assessed using model PSFs generated by
TinyTim software and
synphot generated blackbody spectra. The results for Camera 2 are given in
Table 5.5 below. The mean and standard deviation of the PSF subtraction residuals are given a percentage of the nominal PSF pixel values. The standard deviation can be interpreted as the average relative spatial noise expressed as a percent of the PSF pixel value at any given distance from the PSF center. The mean represents a systemic component in the PSF residuals.
The effects of both cold mask wiggling and focus breathing introduce errors in a PSF-subtracted image, well above 20% of the PSF signal in a narrow band filter, with a spatial scale of a few pixels. The main effect of PSF color dependence is adding a systemic component to the PSF subtracted image. The effect is quite large if the color of the PSF used for subtraction is very different from the image PSF color. It is pronounced in blue, wide filters, like F110W, while in filters like F187W or redder/narrower it is essentially negligible. The best way to cope with this effect is to use PSFs with colors well matched to the sources.
PSF subtraction with NICMOS Camera 3 is extremely difficult due to the large pixel scale which severely undersamples the point spread function, and because of the strong intrapixel sensitivity variations (see
Section 5.2.3) which affect the structure of point source images.