Obtaining the magnetic properties of non-resolved structures in the solar
photosphere is always challenging and problems arise because the inversion is
carried out through the numerical minimization of a merit function that depends
on the proposed model. We investigate the reliability of inversions in which
the stray-light contamination is obtained from the same observations as a local
average. In this case, we show that it is fundamental to include the covariance
between the observed Stokes profiles and the stray-light contamination. The
ensuing modified merit function of the inversion process penalizes large
stray-light contaminations simply because of the presence of positive
correlations between the observables and the stray-light, fundamentally
produced by spatially variable systematics. We caution that using the wrong
merit function, artificially large stray-light contaminations might be
inferred. Since this effect disappears if the stray-light contamination is
obtained as an average over the full field-of-view, we recommend to take into
account stray-light contamination using a global approach.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Ap