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      Design of Near Infrared Sky Brightness Monitor and Test Running at Ngari Observatory in Tibet

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          Abstract

          Tibet is known as the third pole of the earth, as high as the South Pole and North Pole. The Ngari (Ali) observatory in Tibet has the advantage of plenty of photometric night, low precipitable water vapor, high transmittance, good seeing. It is a good site, and promising to be one of the best place for infrared and submillimeter observations in the world. However, there is no data available for sky background brightness in such place, which restrict the astronomical development of the sites. In the near infrared band of J, H, Ks, a NIR sky brightness monitor (NISBM) is designed based on InGaAs photoelectric diode. By using the method of chopper modulation and digital lock-in amplifier processing, the SNR (Signal Noise Ratio), detectivity and the data acquisition speed of the device is greatly improved. For each band of J, H, Ks, an independent instrument is designed and calibrated in laboratory. The NISBM has been installed in Ngari observatory in July of 2017 and obtained the first data of NIR sky brightness at Ngari observatory.

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              The Near‐Infrared Sky Emission at the South Pole in Winter

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                20 June 2018
                Article
                1806.08034
                eeb49349-59f5-4d0c-92e3-dc54b53cdb46

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                19 pages,18 figures
                astro-ph.IM

                Instrumentation & Methods for astrophysics
                Instrumentation & Methods for astrophysics

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