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IR Compendium: Confusion LimitsSPITZER HOME - SPITZER SCIENCE - COMPENDIUM HOME - EXAMPLES INDEX |
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This is the page on Confusion Limits; also see Resolution, Diffraction, and (IR) Background
Confusion (Jump to Spitzer-specific section)The term "confusion-limited" refers to images in which there are so many detected sources that distinguishing individual objects is difficult. In a confusion-limited image, the spatial structure of the background resembles the superposition of many point sources. In the optical, the confusion limit is not often encountered, but can be reached in dense star clusters (e.g., in the image shown below). At near-infrared wavelengths, the background is usually dominated by emission from partially-resolved and unresolved stars or distant galaxies. In the mid- and far-IR, the background can also contain a contribution from Galactic "cirrus" emission. In an image that is near or at the confusion limit, determining whether a particular faint source is part of the background or is a target can be difficult.The structure of the background effectively increases its noise contribution above what would be calculated based on the flux contributed by all of the sources in a region. The structure contributes directly to the variance of the background as it would be measured by aperture or PSF-fitting photometry extraction software, for example. The kinds of confusion observers need to worry about depends on the science goals of the observation. The confusion noise will be different if one wants to extract photometry of sources in an unbiased survey, rather than measuring a source that is known to exist at shorter wavelengths. For example, when the observer has a priori knowledge of a source position, in some cases it may be possible to integrate somewhat below the confusion limit to obtain photometry of that object. The presence of a nearby bright source, with its associated diffraction artifacts, will raise the effective confusion limit. Moving targets offer the possibility of making a second, so-called "shadow" observation, which allows the suppression of confusing sources by subtracting them away. The degree of confusion depends on the wavelength of the observation because of optical properties (PSF, etc) and also galaxy density and their spectral energy distributions (SEDs), the Galactic cirrus SED and structure, etc. This is not an "easy" computation, which is why firm confusion predictions for Spitzer are so difficult; see below. By studying the fluctuations (variations in brightness) from one patch of sky to the next, we may be able to learn more about the most distant galaxies (or stars). Power spectrum analysis (meaning studying mathematically how the brightness varies with size of the patch on the sky) can be used to quantify the fluctuations.
Confusion and SpitzerBecause of Spitzer's high sensitivity and relatively large diffraction-limited image size at the longer wavelengths, many Spitzer images will be confusion-noise-limited. This means that there will be no truly empty or dark places in a Spitzer image, with light from distant galaxies (or stars) on every pixel.Because Spitzer provides much smaller effective beams and higher sensitivity than any previous mission, determining the confusion limit set by such sources is difficult. There is considerable uncertainty as to the nature of the background galaxy counts, and a series of activities in the early mission have given preliminary confusion and source count results for MIPS. Most formal definitions of confusion place the confusion noise at microJy levels and below for IRAC wavelengths, and at mJy levels for MIPS wavelengths. However, users should be aware that even at the many microJy level (corresponding to equivalent K-band mangitudes of 19-20), the density of galaxies may still approach several per square arcminute. This may cause problems for some science programs.
IRAC photometry at the shortest wavelengths can be confusion-limited due to either galaxy or star density. For MIPS, the accuracy of photometry at 70 and 160 µm will often be confusion-limited, as MIPS will detect not only background galaxies, but Galactic cirrus structure. Observers should use the available tools to investigate IR background levels in general. For issues specifically relevant to confusion levels, observers should (a) specifically consider using 2MASS images to investigate stellar density if relevant; and/or (b) take into account the existence of extragalactic background sources, particularly in the very sensitive 3.6 micron IRAC channel where galaxies still emit strongly; and/or (c) use IRAS images to investigate the Galactic cirrus structure. Here are some references on confusion limits and Spitzer:
Part of this page was adapted from Marcia Rieke's talk at the Seattle AAS, January 2003; other parts come from the MIPS SOM chapter.
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This file was last modified on Wed Jan 14 13:40:59 2009.