IR Wavelength Calibration 8/10/15
VIMS' IR wavelength calibration has been observed to be drifting toward
longer wavelengths over the roughly 10 years since the start of the
Cassini orbital tour. The shift amounts to about 9 nm, or about 0.6
channels over the roughly 10.5 years since the start of the Cassini
orbital tour. The reasons for the shift are unknown at present. The
shift was detected and quantified by observing changes in the peaks of
the atmospheric transmission windows in Titan's reflectance spectrum in
the near infrared. Since the wavelength shift was recognized, the VIMS
team has initiated wavelength calibration checks using the internal
calibration diode built into the IR channel. As of November 2014, the
drift toward longer wavelengths in the VIMS IR channel continues.
Going forward from approximately June, 2014, the wavelength calibration
of VIMS will be determined solely using its internal calibration diode.
The present plan has the VIMS team performing diode calibrations every
few days throughout the rest of the Cassini mission, starting
approximately June 2014. See the
current spreadsheet of results.
Cassini Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) Radiometric Calibration 10/16/2016
We derive VIMS Radiometric Calibration, RC19, and project to the end of mission:
Clark et al. (2016) The VIMS Wavelength and Radiometric Calibration.
The calibration data files are in a gziped tar file Since entering orbit in 2004, the
VIMS instrument has undergone small shifts in the wavelength calibration of
the spectrometer. The maximum shift is currently 10.4 nm (0.65 channels)
and is estimated to be 0.71 channels at the end of mission. The wavelength
shifts now require a time-dependent radiometric calibration technique
to be deployed to preserve radiometric accuracy.