Sky-brightness measurements in J, H, and Ks bands at DOME A with NISBM and early results

Autor: Jun Zhang, Yi-hao Zhang, Qi-Jie Tang, Jian Wang, Peng Jiang, Michael C B Ashley, Tuo Ji, Shao-hua Zhang, Qi Feng, Zhi-yue Wang, Feng Zeng, Hong-fei Zhang, Jin-ting Chen, Jie Chen, Ming-hao Jia, Guang-yu Zhang, Hong-yan Zhou, Yi hu, Lifan Wang, Qing-feng Zhu
Rok vydání: 2023
Předmět:
Zdroj: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 521:5624-5635
ISSN: 1365-2966
0035-8711
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stad775
Popis: The radiance of sky brightness differs principally with wavelength passband. Atmospheric scattering of sunlight causes the radiation in the near-infrared band. The Antarctic is a singular area of the planet, marked by an unparalleled climate and geographical conditions, including the coldest temperatures and driest climate on Earth, which leads it to be the best candidate site for observing in infrared bands. At present, there are still no measurements of night-sky brightness at DOME A. We have developed the Near-Infrared Sky Brightness Monitor (NISBM) in the J, H, and Ks bands for measurements at DOME A. The instruments were installed at DOME A in 2019 and early results of NIR sky brightness from 2019 January–April have been obtained. The variation of sky background brightness with solar elevation and scanning angle is analysed. The zenith sky flux intensity for the early night at DOME A in the J band is in the 600–1100 μJy arcsec−2 range, that in the H band is between 1100 and 2600 μJy arcsec−2, and that in the Ks band is in the range ∼200–900 μJy arcsec−2. This result shows that the sky brightness in J and H bands is close to that of Ali in China and Mauna Kea in the USA. The sky brightness in the Ks band is much better than that in Ali, China and Mauna Kea, USA. This shows that, from our early results, DOME A is a good site for astronomical observation in the Ks band.
Databáze: OpenAIRE