SHARC II Calibrators

We have spent a considerable amount of time worrying about calibration. In general, we can consistently measure the flux of well known calibrators (such as planets) to within 15% over a very wide range of weather conditions and airmass. In general, planets are used as primary calibrators, and all secondary calibrators are bootstrapped from them. Finding calibrators is a traditional problem in ground-based sub-mm astronomy. Although some of the sources listed below are not well characterized, we include them here in case nothing else is truly available.

Each of the stationary targets below are already programmed as a UIP catalog. If you logged into the UIP via the SHARC account, the catalog should already be loaded. If not, enter the following command in the UIP:

UIP> cat user[SHARC]:sharccal.cat

All UIP entries start with the prefix: PNT_ or CAL_ . You can use the "verify" command to list them all quickly (ie:

UIP> verify CAL_* 

PLEASE USE THIS CALIBRATION CATALOG!!!!! This makes it easy for us to search the logs for pointing checks, as well as provides stable coordinates for us to adjust and improve the pointing model.

There are also many objects in the solar system that are useful calibrators, though their fluxes vary. To help the user, we have computed the 350 micron fluxes for these objects using the more detailed information described here. You can download these fluxes via the tarball stored here.. Each file in the distribution has 3 columns: UT date, flux (in Jy), and uncertainty (in percent). Primary calibrators have 0% uncertainty.

Table 1: Solar system calibrators. Load them in the UIP using the "PLANET" command. UIP name is same as object name.
Object name
Type
Error
Callisto Moon (Jupiter) 10%
Ceres Asteroid 10%
Davida Asteroid 20%
Egeria Asteroid 10%
Ganymede Moon (Jupiter) 10%
Juno Asteroid 10%
Mars Planet 0
Neptune Planet 0
Pallas Asteroid 10%
Titan Moon (Saturn) 10%
Uranus Planet 0
Vesta Asteroid 10%

Table 2: Stationary calibrators. Load them in the UIP using the "OBS" command. UIP name is given below.

Object name
UIP name
RA
DEC
Flux (Jy)
Comment
CIT6 CAL_CIT6 10 +30 2.42 +/- 0.24 Evolved star
CRL618 CAL_CRL618 04 +36 19.4 +/- 1.9 Evolved star
CRL2688 CAL_CRL2688 21 +36 41.6 +/- 4.2 Evolved star
IRC10216 CAL_IRC10216 09 +13 24.4 +/- 2.4 Evolved star
O_CET CAL_OCETI 02 -02 2.33 +/- 0.23 Evolved star
OH231.8 CAL_OH231 07 -14 17.6 +/- 1.8 Evolved star
VY CMA CAL_VYCMA 07 -26 15.6 +/- 1.8 Evolved star
Arp220 CAL_ARP220 15 +23 10.2 +/- 1.0 Pointlike galaxy
G34.3 CAL_G34.3 18 +01 434 +/- 43 SF region (extended)
GL490 CAL_GL490 03 +58 32.2 +/- 3.2 YSO
HLTau CAL_HLTAU 04 +18 15.9 +/- 1.6 YSO
IRAS16293 CAL_16293m2422 16 -24 127 +/- 13 YSO
K-350 CAL_K350 20 +33 129 +/- 14 SF region
L1551 CAL_L1551 04 18 45.2 +/- 4.5 YSO
NGC2071 CAL_NGC2071 05 +00 60.5 +/- 6.1 SF region (multiple src.)
NGC6334I ????? 17 -36 420 +/- 126 SF region (extended)
TWHya CAL_TWHY 11 -34 6.13 +/- 0.68 YSO
W30H CAL_W30H 02 +61 160 +/- 24 SF region (extended)
W75N CAL_W75N 20 +42 267 +/- 27 SF region
0420-014 PNT_0420m014 04 -01 1 - 5 Blazar
3C273 PNT_3C273 12 +02 1 - 2 Blazar
3C345 PNT_3C345 16 +34 ~1 Blazar
3C84 PNT_3C84 03 +41 ~1 Blazar
OJ287 PNT_OJ287 08 +20 ~1 Blazar

1) Evolved stars: Some of these sources have 10-20% long-period variability (Sandell 1994; Jenness et al. 2002), but are otherwise excellent calibration sources.  Observed (mean) fluxes are derived from measurements with SHARC II since 2003.

2) Blazars are compact but highly variable. Perhaps useful for pointing, but not flux calibration.


This file last updated on