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WFC3 Instrument Handbook
WFC3 Instrument Handbook for Cycle 24
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Wide Field Camera 3 Instrument Handbook for Cycle 24 > Chapter 3: Choosing the Optimum HST Instrument > 3.3 Comparison of WFC3 with Other HST Imaging Instruments

3.3
Comparison of WFC3 with Other HST Imaging
Instruments
3.3.1 Wavelength Coverage
The WFC3 UVIS channel is similar in design to the Wide Field Channel (WFC) of the ACS. There are, however, a few differences. While ACS/WFC is blind at wavelengths shorter than about 370 nm (i.e., shortward of the B band), WFC3/UVIS has excellent sensitivity extending down to 200 nm. The design trade-offs adopted to achieve this extended UV wavelength coverage (primarily the CCD coating and the use of aluminum coatings for the reflective optics) lead to a reduced sensitivity of WFC3 at longer optical wavelengths compared to that of ACS/WFC. WFC3/UVIS has no sensitivity in the far-UV region below 200 nm. The far-UV is covered by three MAMA detectors in ACS and STIS.
3.3.2 Field of View
Figure 3.1 illustrates the fields of view, at the same scale, for all of the HST imaging instruments currently available on HST.
Figure 3.1: Schematic diagram comparing relative sizes of the fields of view for all available HST imaging instruments. Successive lines of text underneath each field of view give the field size in pixels, the pixel scale in arcsec/pixel, and the field size in arcsec. Detector footprints are rendered as rectangular in the diagram and thus do not include the effects of geometric distortion. For a more accurate depiction of detector footprints including geometric distortions and relative HST focal plane locations, see Figure 2.2.
The pixel scale of the WFC3 UVIS channel is 20% finer in comparison to the ACS/WFC, obtained at the cost of covering only about 66% of the area of the ACS field of view.
Table 3.1 presents a comparison of the wavelength coverage, pixel scale, and field of view of WFC3 and of the other HST imaging instruments that are currently available.
3.3.3 Detector Performance
Table 3.2 summarizes the on-orbit measurements of read-out noise and dark current for the WFC3 detectors, and compares them with the parameters for the other currently available HST imaging detectors. Chapter 5 gives more detailed information about the detectors in both channels. Chapter 9 discusses sensitivities, limiting magnitudes, and exposure times.
Table 3.2: Characteristics of HST CCD and HgCdTe imaging detectors currently available. The WFC3/IR dark current includes the instrument thermal background.
(e rms)
Dark current (e/pix/s)
(e)
1
WFC3/IR read noise is for a 16-read linear fit. WFC3/IR double sampling read noise is 20.2–21.4 e.

3.3.4 System Throughputs and Discovery Efficiencies
Figure 3.2 plots the measured on-orbit system throughputs of the two WFC3 channels as functions of wavelength, compared to those of ACS, NICMOS, and WFPC2. These curves include the throughput of the OTA, all of the optical elements of the instruments themselves, and the sensitivities of the detectors. Throughputs were calculated at the central wavelength (the “pivot wavelength”; see 3 to Table 6.2) of each wide-band filter of each instrument.
As Figure 3.2 shows, WFC3 offers a unique combination of high sensitivity and wide spectral coverage ranging from the UV to the near-IR. WFC3 extends and complements, over a large field of view, the optical performance of ACS/WFC at wavelengths shorter than ~400 nm and longer than 1000 nm. The good degree of functional redundancy with ACS will help ensure that the unique scientific capabilities of HST, at optical wavelengths, will remain available until the end of its mission.
Another quantity that is useful when comparing different instruments, especially in the context of wide-angle surveys, is the “discovery efficiency,” defined as system throughput times area of the field of view as projected onto the sky. In Figure 3.3 we plot the discovery efficiencies of the HST imaging instruments, again vs. wavelength. Note that the y-axis is now logarithmic. This figure dramatically illustrates the enormous gains that WFC3 offers, compared to current HST instruments, both in the optical/UV below 400 nm, and in the near-IR.
Finally, we present WFC3’s strengths by including detector noise and thus showing how its efficiency, wide wavelength coverage, and large field of view apply to general problems: the limiting point-source magnitude reached in 10 hours of observing time (Figure 3.4); and the time needed to survey a sky area about 9 times larger than the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, to a limiting ABMAG of 26 (Figure 3.5).
Figure 3.2: System throughputs of optical/infrared imaging instruments on HST as functions of wavelength. The plotted quantities are end-to-end throughputs, including filter transmissions, calculated at the pivot wavelength of each wide-band filter of each camera.
Figure 3.3: Discovery efficiencies of optical/infrared HST imaging instruments, including those verified on-orbit for WFC3. Discovery efficiency is defined as the system throughput (plotted in Figure 3.2) multiplied by the area of the field of view. Note that the y-axis is now logarithmic.
Figure 3.4: Limiting point-source magnitudes reached by optical/infrared HST imaging instruments in 10 hours. (WFC3/UVIS performance has declined slightly from the early on-orbit level shown here due to increasing CTE losses.)
Figure 3.5: Time needed for optical/infrared HST imaging instruments to survey a wide sky area to a limiting extended (1 arcsec2) ABMAG of 26. (WFC3/UVIS performance has declined slightly from the early on-orbit level shown here due to increasing CTE losses.)

Wide Field Camera 3 Instrument Handbook for Cycle 24 > Chapter 3: Choosing the Optimum HST Instrument > 3.3 Comparison of WFC3 with Other HST Imaging Instruments

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