All STIS spectroscopy using apertures less than 3 arcseconds in size and all coronagraphic observations will require an onboard STIS target acquisition (ACQ) and possibly an acquisition/peakup (
ACQ/PEAK) exposure to center the target in the scientific aperture. In this Chapter, we provide the basic information you need to choose an acquisition strategy for your program.
STIS target acquisitions employ the CCD camera to image the target’s field directly and onboard flight software processes the image to locate the position of the target. STIS acquisitions are very reliable, accurate (typically ±0.01 arcsecond for V < 21 point sources), and quick (~6 minutes). For the narrow slits (
≤ 0.1 arcsecond), an
ACQ/PEAK is required, which is accurate to ~5% of the slit width used in the peakup, and takes typically ~6 minutes. For particularly faint targets (V > 21) or complex diffuse sources, overheads will be somewhat more and accuracies somewhat reduced (see details below).
For Phase I proposals, you do not need to determine the details of your acquisition, but need only to determine if an ACQ, and possibly an
ACQ/PEAK, is required, include the necessary orbital time (which is normally dominated by the associated overheads), and assure yourself that your program can be accomplished.
For Phase II, you will need to work out the details of your acquisition procedure, and we provide two tools to assist in this task, as well as examples of different target acquisition (TA) scenarios (see Section 8.5). To determine the correct exposure time, we provide (via the STIS Web page) a
Target Acquisition Exposure Time Calculator (
TA ETC). The input and output parameters in the
TA ETC (as compared with the
Imaging ETC) are specifically designed to facilitate exposure time estimates for target acquisition purposes. For example, the
TA ETC input and output parameters take into account the following:
To determine the correct CHECKBOX size for
DIFFUSE targets, we provide a
Target Acquisition Simulator (TAS), which implements the same algorithms as the flight software, and so should give results in good agreement with what will happen in orbit. The TAS takes as input an image, extracts a subarray centered on the coordinates provided, and searches for the brightest location by passing a
CHECKBOX over the subarray.
For scientific observations taken through spectroscopic slits and for imaging observations with one of the coronagraphic apertures, you will need to use an onboard STIS target acquisition and possibly an acquisition peakup to center your target. Figure 8.1 shows a decision flow for determining whether you require an acquisition or both an acquisition and a peakup to center your target. Remember that accurate target placement is necessary to ensure accurate wavelength calibration of spectra as well as good throughput and accurate flux calibration of targets viewed through small apertures. (See Section 4.3 in the
STIS Data Handbook for a more comprehensive discussion of the accuracy of flux and wavelength calibration.)
STIS target acquisition exposures (MODE=ACQ) always use the
CCD, one of the filtered or unfiltered apertures for
CCD imaging, and a mirror as the optical element in the grating wheel. Acquisition exposures center your target in the slit or behind a coronagraphic bar to an accuracy (2
σ) of ~0.01 arcsecond for a point source, and 0.01 to 0.1 arcsecond for a diffuse object (larger targets have larger errors). A typical STIS point source target acquisition takes ~6 minutes.
An acquisition peakup exposure (MODE=ACQ/PEAKUP) must be taken following the target acquisition exposure to refine the centering of point or point-like sources in slits less than or equal to 0.1 arcsecond wide (or tall). Peakup exposures use a slit and are taken with the CCD as the detector and with either a mirror or a spectroscopic element in position on the grating wheel. Typical target acquisition centering accuracies following a peakup sequence are 0.05 times the dimension of the slit or bar. Typical STIS imaging point source peakups take ~5–10 minutes; see
Table 8.5 for the formulae needed to determine the duration of a peakup acquisition. Any uncertainty in the target’s position along the dispersion direction translates directly into an uncertainty in the zero point of the wavelength scale. So observers who need the best possible absolute wavelength accuracy will need to perform an
ACQ/PEAKUP even if their science observations will be performed using a wide aperture. However, the
ACQ/PEAKUP exposure itself should never use an aperture wider than 0.1 arcsecond in the dispersion direction.
Figure 8.2 shows the complete decision tree for STIS target acquisitions.
For most exposures, two guide stars will be used to support the observation, enabling correction of drift. In some cases, however, it may not be possible to find a guide star pair to support the observation, or the observation may drop to single guide star mode because one of the guide stars cannot be acquired. In that case, the roll of the telescope is under GYRO control, which will allow a slow drift of the target on a circular arc centered on the single guide star. If you are informed that only single guide stars can be found for your observation, you can try to get a guide star pair by relaxing the scheduling requirements (e.g. expand the ORIENT range). If you must use a single guide star for a multiple-orbit visit, or if your observation is especially time-critical and would be significantly degraded by failure to single guide star mode, you should consider including a re-centering
ACQ/PEAK during the visit.
Table 8.1 gives what is generally the worst case object motion of the target on the detector for a single guide star observation. For example, if a science observation in an 0.2 arcsecond slit is 3 orbits in duration, then the target would move to the edge of the aperture; a 2 orbit visit would leave the target halfway toward the edge. Thus, only single orbit visits should be done on a single guide star. However, for science in a 2 arcsecond slit, the motion over 4 orbits only takes the target 13% of the way to the edge of the slit. Thus, if high photometric accuracy is not required, a single guide star should be sufficient for the larger slits.