Both Fig. 90 and Tab. 21
provide the expected
count rate of the OM, in counts per second, for
mag stars of
various types, with the different filters introduced above. These numbers
were obtained under the assumption of a perfect,
i.e., deadtime-free
and coincidence loss-free,
detector, and with an aperture radius of
(
)
for optical (UV) filters.
| Filter | B0 | A0 | F0 | G0 | G2 | K0 | M0 | WD |
| V | 1555 | 1510 | 1473 | 1473 | 1495 | 1452 | 1392 | 1412 |
| B | 6190 | 5272 | 3805 | 3010 | 2577 | 2289 | 1337 | 4454 |
| U | 8533 | 2216 | 1486 | 1119 | 966 | 444 | 178 | 4667 |
| UVW1 | 5647 | 958 | 366 | 218 | 182 | 29.1 | 17.4 | 3093 |
| UVM2 | 2276 | 316 | 39.3 | 8.69 | 5.54 | 0.436 | 0.032 | 1174 |
| UVW2 | 950 | 126 | 11.1 | 2.06 | 1.19 | 0.112 | 0.069 | 561 |
The numbers listed in Tab. 21 can be used to calculate the perfect detector count rates of stars of given magnitude by the formula
where
is the count rate of an
mag star of the same
spectral type than the target and
and
are the
and
the count rate of the target of interest, respectively.
However, OM deadtime and coincidence losses must be taken into account.
For the 20th magnitude stars in Fig. 90 and
Tab. 21, OM coincidence losses are
negligible. Losses become significant for a point source
at a count rate of about 10 counts s
(about 10% coincidence).
The correction is approximated by the following formula:
An optimum aperture radius of
was found to be
the radius at which the loss correction formula is self
consistent. At this radius its accuracy is at a level of 5%
between different frametimes.
The maximum value of the frametime (11.04 ms) occurs for full frame
exposures, high or low resolution, where the whole detector is used.
This correction is performed by the XMM-Newton Science Analysis
System (§ 6).
In Fig. 91 a comparison between
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In Tab. 22 an estimate of the limiting magnitudes that
can be detected with OM
in an integration time of 1000 s at the 5-sigma confidence level is provided.
They have been obtained from simulations, taking into account the whole
aperture (
radius for optical filters and
for UV) in which the
OM photometric calibration is based. If we consider that real detections can
be restricted to the very few pixels in the core of the PSF, since the total
background is then lower, the limit would be about one magnitude fainter.
| Filter | Spectral type | ||||
| B0 | A0 | G0 | K0 | WD | |
| V | 19.8 | 19.8 | 19.7 | 19.7 | 19.7 |
| B | 21.0 | 20.8 | 20.2 | 19.9 | 20.6 |
| U | 21.8 | 20.4 | 19.6 | 18.6 | 21.2 |
| UVW1 | 21.1 | 19.2 | 17.6 | 15.4 | 20.5 |
Tab. 23 presents the limiting magnitudes derived from the photometric analysis of one of the OM calibration fields (HD5980, also observed from the ground). This can be considered as an extreme case because of the crowdness of the field which increases the observed background by overlap of the PSF wings. This is why the obtained limits are brighter than the simulations of Tab. 22.
| Filter | Spectral type range | ||
| B0/A0 | A1/G3 | G4/M8 | |
| V | 19.5 | 19.4 | 19.4 |
| B | 20.6 | 19.8 | 19.3 |
| U | 20.2 | 19.4 | 18.6 |
The expected levels of different external background radiation processes
in the optical/UV are tabulated in Table 24.
The background count rate in the OM is dominated by the zodiacal
light in the optical. In the far UV the intrinsic detector background
becomes important. Images are regularly taken with the blocked filter
and no LED illumination to measure the detector dark counts. The
mean OM dark count rate is
counts s
pixel
.
The variation across the detector is
9 % , with a mainly radial
dependence, being highest in an annulus of about
radius and
lowest at the centre. Variation as a function of time are
7% ,
without any apparent trend. However, if a very bright star
is in the field of view the dark rate can be up to
60%
higher than normal, despite the use of the Blocked filter.
| Background source | Occurrence | Count rate range |
| Diffuse Galactic |
all directions | 2.14 |
| Zodiacal |
longitude
|
1.69 |
| Average dark count rate |
all directions |
|
Artifacts can appear in the XMM-Newton OM images due to light being scattered within the detector. These have two causes: internal reflection of light within the detector window and reflection of the off-axis starlight and background light from part of the detector housing.
The first of these causes a faint, out of focus ghost image of a bright star, displaced in the radial direction away from the primary image (see Fig. 92).
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