This appendix contains plots of throughputs for each WFC3 filter. Section 9.3 explains how to use these throughputs to calculate expected count rates from your source.
The first figure for each filter gives the integrated system throughput based on on-orbit observations of spectrophotometric standards. This is the combination of the efficiencies of the detector and of the optical elements in the light path. The throughput is defined as the number of detected counts/second/cm2 of telescope area relative to the incident flux in photons/cm
2/s. For both the UVIS and IR channels, “counts” is the number of electrons detected. In both channels the detected counts obey Poisson statistics, except that at short wavelengths in the UVIS channel, a single incoming photon has a finite chance of producing multiple electrons in the CCD.
Section 5.4.2 describes this phenomenon, which was measured to have a much smaller effect in the UVIS detectors compared to theoretical predictions. The plots in this appendix have been corrected to remove multiple electrons generated by UV photons, using a correction that is intermediate between the theoretical and measured UVIS “quantum yields.” The throughput includes all obscuration effects in the optical train (e.g., due to the
HST secondary).
Note that the tables in the synphot package and the WFC3
Exposure Time Calculator all assume vacuum wavelengths for both the UVIS and IR filter transmission data.
To recalculate the throughput with the most recent detector QE tables in synphot, you can create total-system-throughput tables (instrument plus OTA) using the
synphot calcband task.
calcband takes any valid
obsmode command string as input and produces a table with two columns of data called “wavelength” and “throughput” as its output. For example, to evaluate the throughput for the F475W filter and the UVIS detector, Chip 1, you would use the command
calcband wfc3,uvis1,f475w sdssg_thpt. The resulting throughput table is stored in an IRAF table,
sdssg_thpt. The table can be converted to standard text format with
tdump "sdssg_thpt" datafile="sdssg_thpt.txt" columns="wavelength,throughput".
For point sources, an aperture size of 5в5 pixels has been used for the UVIS channel, while an aperture size of 3
в3 pixels has been used for the IR channel. For extended sources, a 1 arcsec
2 aperture was used. The read noise has been computed assuming a number of readouts
NREAD= integer (
t / 1000 s), where
t is the exposure time, with a minimum
NREAD=2.