Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 April 2016
Observational tasks that require photometry of large numbers of objects, or over large fields, are still best approached using photographic photometry. Nevertheless, there are well-known problems in using photographic emulsions as two-dimensional detectors; these include their non-linearity and unknown photometric zero-points. The non-linearity can be calibrated using standard sensitometer techniques but the provision of photometric zero-points (and the verification of the validity of the intensity calibration) can be done properly only by providing a sequence of standards down to the plate limit. One approach to this latter problem, that has recently been revived by Racine (1969), is to use a sub-beam prism as originally suggested by Pickering (1891).