DIAGNOSTIC:
The examples are images of synthetic models of MIF512 darks that include
effects of FAST readout modes. They show a combination of different anomalies
such as linear dark current, shading, amp glow, and hot pixels.
The linear dark current is the traditional detected signal in the absence
of any source illumination, and it scales linearly with exposure time.
In NICMOS there is a spatial structure to this signal, with it being
higher in the corners near the readout amplifiers. This is probably
the result of heating by the amplifiers themselves, and is different from
the amplifier glow (see section on amplifier glow). This signal has
also been seen to be variable, and is probably temperature related.
All 3 cameras have a linear dark current of ~0.05 e/s near the center, and about a factor of 2 higher than that in the corners. There is also some evidence for quadrant dependence, which is not unexpected since each quadrant has its own amplifier.
CURE:
A tool to allow users to generate synthetic darks is available. This tool allows the observer to vary
the degree of dark current, amp glow, and shading to better match their data.