30 March - 2 April 2023

A Productive Weekend at the Ridge Lab

After the previous days of high winds, calmer weather arrived on March 30, along with clear skies, which made for favourable conditions for rooftop work and solar measurements at the Ridge Lab.

After performing cell tests earlier in the campaign to verify the alignment of the Bruker FTIR, Erik decided to prioritize solar measurements. On March 30, cloudy conditions in the morning at the Ridge Lab prevented measurements from being made. The skies cleared by the afternoon and Erik was able to record NIR solar measurements for the remainder of the day. The following day, switched to MIR measurements after swapping the Bruker FTIR's beam splitter, and cooling the detectors with liquid nitrogen.

In the afternoon on Friday March 31, clear skies and calm conditions allowed Erik and Pierre to work on the Bruker FTIR’s sun-tracker on the roof of the Ridge Lab. They found that the sun- tracker was slightly unlevelled and they spent some time to make adjustments to the sun- tracker’s base to level it.

On Saturday April 1, Erik then began to reinitialize the sun-tracker’s software after the previous days adjustments to the sun-tracker. This involved redefining the tracker’s initial position and making small corrections to the azimuth and altitude positions of its mirrors to better pinpoint the Sun’s portion. Active calibration was also performed by optimizing the tracker’s NetCam image of the Sun. After the reinitialization of the tracker’s software, Erik then resumed MIR solar measurements with the Bruker FTIR for the remainder of the weekend.

In the UV-vis lab on March 30-31, Ramina finalized the straylight tests & results for the UT-GBS using both a halogen lamp light source, as well as zenith-sky sunlight. With the UT-GBs tests completed and the instrument operating under optimal conditions, Ramina then sent some time setting up the PEARL-GBS to in order to perform the resolution, straylight, polarization, and dark current & bias tests in the coming days. Pierre and Ramina also replaced the PEARL-GBS heater on the roof, as the previous one had stopped working which enabled the dome to begin frosting up again. With the new heater in place, the dome is clear to perform optimal measurements once the lab tests are complete.

The Pandora instrument continues to perform alignments to track the Sun and has required some manual aligning of the setup on the rooftop by the team to ensure that the components are levelled. In doing so, it can continue to track the Sun without interruption to establish a good record of alignments in preparation for measurements.

Ramina Alwarda and Erik Lutsch
[On behalf of the 2023 Canadian Arctic ACE/OSIRIS Validation Campaign team]

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