• Acta Optica Sinica
  • Vol. 38, Issue 1, 0111002 (2018)
Rui Wang1、2, Zhi Xu1, Yuchao Chen1、2, Zhenyu Jin1, Yongyuan Xiang1, Yu Fu1, and Kaifan Ji1、*
Author Affiliations
  • 1 Yunnan Astronomical Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, Yunnan 650216, China
  • 2 University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
  • show less
    DOI: 10.3788/AOS201838.0111002 Cite this Article Set citation alerts
    Rui Wang, Zhi Xu, Yuchao Chen, Zhenyu Jin, Yongyuan Xiang, Yu Fu, Kaifan Ji. Field Calibration of Multiband High Resolution Imaging System with New Vacuum Solar Telescope[J]. Acta Optica Sinica, 2018, 38(1): 0111002 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    To achieve the filed matching of multiband images obtained by new vacuum solar telescope (NVST) with a high accuracy of 0.1″, a method called pinhole aperture filed calibration is proposed and applied to the experimental analysis about the photosphere [TiO(705.8 nm)] channel and chromosphere [Hα(656.28 nm)] channel of NVST. A pinhole-array aperture (11×11 pinholes) is used to the calibration of the rotation, scaling and translation relationships between the fields of the two channels. As a result, the high accuracy field matching of two-field solar images with the accuracy reaching up to 0.031″ is accomplished by affine transformation. It is also found that the matching residual is not uniform in the entire field (about 2') and the maximum residual is about 0.076″ at the edge of the filed. The values of the calibration parameters are changing with the variation of optical platform position, and the matching difference of filed is 0.05″, which is within the precision of the resolution requirement. The estimated accuracy is also supported by the analysis of measured data from TiO channel and Hα channel.
    Rui Wang, Zhi Xu, Yuchao Chen, Zhenyu Jin, Yongyuan Xiang, Yu Fu, Kaifan Ji. Field Calibration of Multiband High Resolution Imaging System with New Vacuum Solar Telescope[J]. Acta Optica Sinica, 2018, 38(1): 0111002
    Download Citation