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- It is assumed that the polarimeter or spectropolarimeter contains a
fixed analyser and a rotating half or quarter wave-plate which is stepped
in units of 45 degrees.
- Both linear and circular polarization can be measured.
- Different target exposures must not be rotated with respect to one
another. That is, the linear mapping between corresponding positions in any two target
exposures can only include magnification and a shift of origin (rotation
and shear are not allowed).
- The analyser is assumed to be perfect (i.e. the transmission and
efficiency of the analyser are both assumed to be
).
- Variances can only be calculated for the reduced quantities (Stokes
vectors, polarization vectors, etc.) if the observed intensity
images have usable variances associates with them (i.e. these
input variances cannot be estimated for dual-beam data).
- Corrections can be applied when calculating the Stokes vectors which
take account of any differences in the exposure times between raw frames,
and any difference in the sensitivity of the two channels of the
dual-beam polarimeter. They rely on redundancy in the supplied data, and
require a specific set of analyser positions to be used (described
here) when obtaining the data.
Next: Dual-beam Polarimetry
Up: Introduction
Previous: Single-beam Facilities
POLPACK
Starlink User Note 223
D.S. Berry & T.M. Gledhill
26th February 2003
E-mail:ussc@star.rl.ac.uk
Copyright © 2008 Science and Technology Facilities Council