Abstract

A new temperature calibration scheme was proposed and implemented on the National Physical Laboratory infrared radiometer Absolute Measurements of Blackbody Emitted Radiance (AMBER) operating in the wavelength range from 9 µm to 11 µm and equipped with a cryogenically cooled mercury cadmium telluride detector. The scheme involves measurements of the relative spectral responsivity of the filter radiometer including the spectral transmittance of the window and lens. It requires calibration at two reference temperatures, but does not involve measurement of the zero-radiance signal. The scheme uses a Ga-point blackbody as one reference point, and a variable temperature blackbody source at close to −30 °C with its temperature measured with a standard platinum resistance thermometer as the other. The measured temperature was compared using the variable temperature blackbody as the source against the temperature measured by the standard platinum resistance thermometer and agreement within the uncertainties was confirmed at intermediate temperatures. The scheme has the advantage that it makes full use of the small uncertainty realised by the fixed-point blackbody. The scheme was successfully implemented in an international comparison of sea surface temperature measuring radiometers where AMBER served to provide the reference.

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