Abstract We present an improved zodiacal light model, optimized for optical wavelengths, using archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging from the SKYSURF program. The T. Kelsall et al. model used infrared imaging from the Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE) on board the Cosmic Background Explorer to create a 3D structure of the interplanetary dust cloud. However, this model cannot accurately represent zodiacal light emission outside of DIRBE’s nominal wavelength bandpasses, the bluest of which is 1.25 μ m. We present a revision to this model (called ZodiSURF) that incorporates analytical forms of both the scattering phase function and albedo as a function of wavelength, which are empirically determined across optical wavelengths (0.3–1.6 μ m) from over 5000 HST sky surface brightness (sky-SB) measurements. This refined model results in significantly improved predictions of zodiacal light emission at these wavelengths and for Sun angles >80°. Fits to HST data show an uncertainty in the model of ∼4.5%. Remarkably, the HST sky-SB measurements show an excess of residual diffuse light (HST Sky—ZodiSURF –Diffuse Galactic Light) of 0.013 ± 0.006 MJy sr −1 . We suggest that a very dim spherical dust cloud may need to be included in the zodiacal light model, which we present here as a toy model.
O’Brien et al. (Tue,) studied this question.