Reanalysis of the 1992 South Pole Millimetre-Wavelength Atmospheric Opacity Data
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia
21(3) 264 - 274
Published: 30 September 2004
Abstract
In 1992 an NRAO 225-GHz site survey heterodyne radiometer was placed at the Geographical South Pole. The instrument operated over an entire annual cycle and provided direct measurements of the millimetre-wave sky brightness temperature as a function of zenith angle. Interpreted in a single-slab ‘skydip’ radiation transfer model of the atmosphere, these sky brightness measurements provided a time series of the millimetre atmospheric opacity. Statistics derived from this opacity time series were important for making comparisons with other candidate millimetre and sub-millimetre wave astronomy sites. This paper reexamines the 1992 measurements and the original analysis. Details of the skydip fit model, radiometer gain error, instrument stability, and a mid-season replacement to a window in the instrument enclosure combined to cause a modest under-reporting of the atmospheric opacity in previous reports. Unchanged are earlier conclusions that dry air makes a significant contribution to the total opacity at 225 GHz.Keywords: instrumentation: miscellaneous — methods: data analysis — site testing — atmospheric effects
https://doi.org/10.1071/AS03012
© ASA 2004