Scientific assessment of the quality of OSIRIS images

DOI: 
10.1051/0004-6361/201525985
Publication date: 
01/11/2015
Main author: 
Tubiana C.
IAA authors: 
Lara L.;Gutierrez P.J.;Lopez Moreno J.J.
Authors: 
Tubiana C., Guttler C., Kovacs G., Bertini I., Bodewits D., Fornasier S., Lara L., La Forgia F., Magrin S., Pajola M., Sierks H., Barbieri C., Lamy P.L., Rodrigo R., Koschny D., Rickman H., Keller H.U., Agarwal J., A'Hearn M.F., Barucci M.A., Bertaux J.-L., Besse S., Boudreault S., Cremonese G., Da Deppo V., Davidsson B., Debei S., De Cecco M., El-Maarry M.R., Fulle M., Groussin O., Gutierrez-Marques P., Gutierrez P.J., Hoekzema N., Hofmann M., Hviid S.F., Ip W.-H., Jorda L., Knollenberg J., Kramm J.-R., Kuhrt E., Kuppers M., Lazzarin M., Lopez Moreno J.J., Marzari F., Massironi M., Michalik H., Moissl R., Naletto G., Oklay N., Scholten F., Shi X., Thomas N., Vincent J.-B.
Journal: 
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Publication type: 
Article
Volume: 
583
Pages: 
Number: 
A46
Abstract: 
OSIRIS, the scientific imaging system onboard the ESA Rosetta spacecraft, has been imaging the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and its dust and gas environment since March 2014. The images serve different scientific goals, from morphology and composition studies of the nucleus surface, to the motion and trajectories of dust grains, the general structure of the dust coma, the morphology and intensity of jets, gas distribution, mass loss, and dust and gas production rates. We present the calibration of the raw images taken by OSIRIS and address the accuracy that we can expect in our scientific results based on the accuracy of the calibration steps that we have performed. Methods. We describe the pipeline that has been developed to automatically calibrate the OSIRIS images. Through a series of steps, radiometrically calibrated and distortion corrected images are produced and can be used for scientific studies. Calibration campaigns were run on the ground before launch and throughout the years in flight to determine the parameters that are used to calibrate the images and to verify their evolution with time. We describe how these parameters were determined and we address their accuracy. Results. We provide a guideline to the level of trust that can be put into the various studies performed with OSIRIS images, based on the accuracy of the image calibration. © 2015 ESO.
Database: 
WOK
SCOPUS
ADS
SCOPUS
URL: 
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2015A&A...583A..46T/abstract
ADS Bibcode: 
2015A&A...583A..46T
Keywords: 
Instrumentation: detectors; Methods: data analysis; Space vehicles: instruments