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WFC3 Data Handbook
WFC3 Data Handbook V. 4.0
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WFC3 Data Handbook > Chapter 1: The WFC3 Instruments > 1.2 The UVIS Channel

1.2
The UVIS channel employs a mosaic of two 4096 x 2051 e2v Ltd. (formerly Marconi Applied Technologies Ltd.) CCDs, with ~0.040 arcsecond pixels, covering a nominal 162 x 162 arcsecond field of view. These CCDs are thinned and back-illuminated devices cooled by thermo-electric cooler (TEC) stacks and housed in sealed, evacuated dewars with fused silica windows, nearly identical to the ones used for ACS. The spectral response of the UVIS CCDs is optimized for imaging from the near-UV at 200 nm to visible wavelengths at 1000 nm. The two CCDs are butted together but have a 35-pixel gap between the two chips (~1.4 arcsec on the sky). Minimum UVIS exposure time is 0.5 sec. The dynamic range for a single exposure is ultimately limited by the depth of the CCD full well (~70,000 electrons), which determines the total amount of charge that can accumulate in any one pixel during an exposure without saturation.
The UVIS detector operates only in ACCUM mode to produce time-integrated images. Cosmic rays affect all UVIS exposures, therefore observations should be broken into multiple exposures or dither patterns whenever possible, to allow removal of cosmic rays in post-observation data processing.
WFC3 recycles hardware used in WF/PC-1 to house the complement of filters for the UVIS channel. The Selectable Optical Filter Assembly (SOFA) contains a stack of 12 wheels housing 48 physical elements covering the UV/Visible range: 42 full-frame filters, 5 quad filters (2 x 2 mosaics providing 4 different bandpasses), and 1 grism, giving a total of 63 spectral elements. Each wheel has an open slot such that when an observation is taking place, the appropriate wheel is rotated to place the desired filter in the beam, while the other wheels place the open slot in the light path.
Figure 1.2 shows a schematic of the UVIS channel aperture projected onto the sky with respect to the V2/V3 reference frame. (For definitions of the coordinate systems in the figure, please refer to Section 6.4.3 of the WFC3 Instrument Handbook.) The WFC3 optics cause the nominally square field of view of the UVIS detector to be projected onto the sky as a skewed rhombus, 162 arcsec on a side, with an angle of 86.1 degrees between the sides. This distortion affects both the photometric accuracy and astrometric precision of the UVIS images. For a thorough discussion of WFC3’s geometric distortion, we refer the reader to Chapter 4.
Figure 1.2: Schematic of UVIS aperture with respect to V2/V3 reference frame

WFC3 Data Handbook > Chapter 1: The WFC3 Instruments > 1.2 The UVIS Channel

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