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Astronomical Detectors

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Astronomical Detectors. The First Detector in Astronomy. Eye: complete system of telescope (variable aperture, ~1cm max), detector, and data reduction processor. Retina Light sensitive, chemical process Rods 100 million 2 m m wide can detect low light levels averted vision Cones - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Astronomical Detectors

Astronomical Detectors

Page 2: Astronomical Detectors

The First Detector in Astronomy

Eye: complete system of telescope (variable aperture, ~1cm max), detector, and data reduction processor

Retina• Light sensitive, chemical process

Rods• 100 million• 2m wide

• can detect low light levels

• averted vision

Cones

• color information

• 7 million

• cluster near axis

• 1000 per square mm

Reusable

• integration times 100 ms

Quantum efficiency ~1%

Resolution 80 arcsecs

Page 3: Astronomical Detectors

Discoveries made with the Eye

Naked Eyes

• Nomenclature: Constellations, star names

• Astrometry: Stellar positions

• Magnitude scale

• Planets in solar system, planet orbits (Tycho, Kepler)

• Comets

• Supernovae explosions, variable stars

• Sunspots (by Chinese 800 B.C.)

• Solar corona (eclipse)

• Lunar Phases

• Star Clusters (e.g. Pleiades)

Page 4: Astronomical Detectors

Discoveries made with the Eye

With telescopes

• Sunspot cycle

• Saturn‘s rings, Jupiter‘s Red Spot

• Nebulae, Spiral Nebulae

• Parallax, astrometric measurements

• Asteroids, moons of most planets

• Craters on Moon

Page 5: Astronomical Detectors

Observations with the eye can be unreliable

• No record of observations so as to check results

• Precise measurements cannot be made (position, magnitude, etc) because observations are not recorded or digitized

• Integration time of eye is short so faint objects cannot be seen without using larger and larger telescopes

Example of unreliability of eye: Canals on Mars

Page 6: Astronomical Detectors

Ground-based CTIO 4m

Hubble Space Telescope

Eta Carinae Images over the past 100 years

Page 7: Astronomical Detectors

• 1840 J.W. Draper makes a photograph of the moon. Followed by photographs of the Sun by Foucault and Fizeau

• Sunspots photographed in 1858 by W. De La Rue

• Jansen and Lockyer in the 1870s photographed the solar spectrum and discovered the spectral lines of Helium.

• Ainsee Common photographed Orion Nebula and these revealed stars and details you could not see in a telescope

• Photographs by Hubble in the early 1900‘s established that some nebula where „island universes“ (i.e. galaxies). His spectral observations of galaxies (exposures of more than one night) led to the discovery of the expansion of the Universe.

• For 100 years photographic plates/film dominated the field of astronomical detectors.

A Revolution in Detectors: Photographic Plates

Page 8: Astronomical Detectors

• Photomultiplers are photon counting devices that consist of vacuum tube with a photocathode and focusing electrodes for amplification.

• Photocathode: light striking the photocathode produces an electron through the photoelectric effect

• Focusing electrodes focus the electron toward electron multiplier or dynode. Each dynode is held at a more positive voltage as the previous one

• Electrons are accelerated as they approach the first dynode arriving with greater energy.

• More low energy electrons are released and acclerated by the second dynode.

•A cascade amplifies the number of electrons (1 photon can produce up to 108 electrons)

• At anode an electric current is produced

Single Channel Detectors: Photomultiplier Tubes

Page 9: Astronomical Detectors

In 1907 Joel Stebbins pioneered the use of photoelectric devices in Astronomy

Page 10: Astronomical Detectors

Spectral response of some commonly used photocathode materials

Page 11: Astronomical Detectors

Photomultiplier tubes: pile up errors

Each detected photon produces a pulse of finite duration, t0, which causes a dead time in the detector. The number of pulses (exposure time) is reduced by the amount of overlapping deadtimes.

N = n/(1–t0n)

N is the true rate, and n the apparent rate

Pile-up errors System blocks completely at

high light levels

Page 12: Astronomical Detectors

Disadvantages of Photomultiplier tubes:

• Must be operated at high voltages

• High light levels can destroy the tube

• Not very efficient in optical regions: 3500 to 10.000 Ang.

• Single channel devices (more on this later)

Page 13: Astronomical Detectors

Multi-Channel Detectors (Arrays): Photographic Plates

Advantages of photographic plates:

• Wide field of view. TLS Schmidt plates are 3 deg x 3 deg.

• Resolution, more so than a CCD of the same area

Photographic plates were the first two-dimensional detectors

Page 14: Astronomical Detectors

Disadvantages of photographic plates:

• Low quantum efficiency. The best plates have a QE of about 3%

• Long exposure times, inefficient use of time

• Reciprocity failure. It becomes less effective as exposure time increases

• Non-linear color sensitivity. Plates are more sensitive to blue light

• Hypersensitising and Developing. Hypersensitising involves baking plates to increase efficiency (up to 10%). You cannot see results until after developing usually many hours later.

• Storage. They are fragile and take up space. They also decay with age.

• Digitisation. Must be scanned to put the data in digital form

• Cost and availability. In 1996 a single 30 cm x 30 cm plate costs $100 USD. Kodak no longer makes plates.

So why do we not still use plates?

Page 15: Astronomical Detectors

Reciprocity Failure of Photograhic Plates

Cross section of a photographic plate

Page 16: Astronomical Detectors

CCD: The Digital Revolution

• CCD = Charge Coupled Device

- A photon detecting device that exploits the photoelectric effect and the semiconducting properties of silicon

- The voltage generated is coupled to the intensity of the incident light

• Pixel = picture element. Each pixel is an independent photon detector

• DN = Data Number (ADU = Analog to Digital Unit)

- The output signal from a CCD. Value and range depend on the nature of the voltage digitization. E.g. an 8-bit CCD produces DNs from 0 to 28 (0 to 255). Most CCDs are 16 bit (maximum = 65535) or higher

Nomenclature:

Page 17: Astronomical Detectors

CCD Properties and Definitions

Page 18: Astronomical Detectors

Material Eg (eV) max (Å)

Pure Si 1.1 11300

GaAs 1.43 8670

InSb 0.36 34400

max = 12400 Å/Eg

Page 19: Astronomical Detectors

n-type: a material with more than 4 valence electrons is added (As, from group Va). The extra electrons cannot be accommodated in the valence band and so occupy the conduction band. They represent a persistent set of negative carriers

p-type: a material with fewer than 4 valence electrons is added (e.g. B, from group IIIa). This has one fewer electron than normal and creates a small "vacuum" in the electron sea of the valence band. This is called a "hole." As valence electrons shift to fill it, the hole propagates like a positive charge in the opposite direction. The holes represent a persistent set of positive carriers.

From http://www.astro.virginia.edu/class/oconnell/astr511/lec11-f03.html

Page 20: Astronomical Detectors

In the depletion region a photon produces an electron. This migrates into the conduction band

Page 21: Astronomical Detectors

The Basic Unit of a CCD

The basic element of a CCD consists of a Metal Oxide Semiconductor. The bulk material is p-silicon on which an insulating layer of silicon oxide has been grown as well as thin conducting electrodes of transparent polysilicon. The central electrode is set to a positive bias while the two flanking electrodes are negative. This creates a "depletion" region under the central electrode containing no holes but a deep potential well to trap electrons. The region shown is about 10µ thick. During exposure light enters through the "front-side" electrodes. Photoelectrons generated under the central electrode will be attracted toward the electrode and held below it. The corresponding holes will be swept away into the bulk silicon.

From http://www.astro.virginia.edu/class/oconnell/astr511/lec11-f03.html

Page 22: Astronomical Detectors

Reading out a CCD

Parallel registers shift the charge along columns

There is one serial register at the end which reads the charge along the final row and records it to a computer

A „3-phase CCD“

ColumnsFor last row, shift is done along the row

Page 23: Astronomical Detectors

The CCD is first clocked along the parallel register to shift the charge down a column

The CCD is then clocked along a serial register to readout the last row of the CCD

The process continues until the CCD is fully read out.

Figure from O‘Connell‘s lecture notes on detectors

Page 24: Astronomical Detectors
Page 25: Astronomical Detectors

How much charge is lost in the this charge transfer process?

Typical Charge Transfer Efficiency of a CCD is >99.999 %

Suppose you have a 4096 x 4096 CCD and detect 40.000 photons (electrons). Signal to Noise ratio = √N = 200

Charge recorded = 40.000 x 0.999994096 = 38.394

1605 electrons „lost“

S/N decreased to 195

Page 26: Astronomical Detectors

Typical CCD readout times are 90 – 240 secs, depending on the size of the CCD. This is for single amplifier CCDs. To reduce the readout time some devices can have 4 channels (amplifiers) for readout:

Serial register with one amplfier

Normal readout

4 Serial registers with 4 amplfiers

4 Channel CCD

4 channel CCD cuts readout time by a factor of 4. Problem: each quadrant usually behaves differently, with its own bias, flat field response, etc. In the data reduction 4 channel CCDs have to be reduced as if they were 4 independent frames.

Page 27: Astronomical Detectors

Quantum Efficiency of some science grade CCDs from ESO:

The real power of CCDs is their high quantum efficiency

Page 28: Astronomical Detectors

Quantum Efficiency of CCDs compared to other devices

Page 29: Astronomical Detectors

Two basic types of CCDs:

Front illuminated CCD: A CCD whose gate structure is located in front of the potential wells. In other words the light has to pass through the gates

Back illuminated CCD: A CCD whose thickness is reduced to 10 m so that it can be focused on the front where there are no gates. A back illuminated CCD is just a front illuminated CCD flipped and thinned. It is more efficient, particularly in the blue.

Risk: There is a risk that in the thinning process the CCD will be destroyed

Page 30: Astronomical Detectors

Thick Front-illuminated CCD

Thin Back-illuminated CCD

Page 31: Astronomical Detectors

For wavelengths shorter than 4000 Å electrons are generated close to the surface. Thus backside CCDs have a much higher potential for ultraviolet sensitivity than front side thick devices

Front side (thick) versus Back side (thin) CCDs

Page 32: Astronomical Detectors

Front side (thick) versus Back side (thin) CCDs

Thin CCDs have a much higher quantum efficiency, particularly in the blue. Most CCDs in use are thinned as the thinning process is fairly reliable and it is rare when a CCDs is destroyed in the thinning process.

Page 33: Astronomical Detectors

CCD Parameters Important for Observations

• Gain: Converts ADU to number of photons detected. Important for Signal-to-Noise estimate. Typically 0.5–10 e–1/ADU

• Linearity: Detected counts should be proportional to the exposure time. If a CCD has a non-linear regime these level of counts should be avoided

• Readout Noise: Noise introduced by CCD readout electronics. negligible for High Signal-to Noise observations

• Dark: Thermal noise. Neglible for High Signal-to-Noise Observations Most science grades CCDs are kept at –120 C or cooler.

• Bias level: Constant level added to the data by the electronics to ensure that there are no negative numbers

McDonald CCD for coude spectrograph:

Gain = 0.56 ± 0.015 e–1/ADU

Readout Noise = 3.06 electrons

Bias level = 1024

Page 34: Astronomical Detectors

Noise Tests for CCD: Linearity

1.5 x 105

Mea

n In

tens

ity

Take a series of frames of a low intensity lamp and plot the mean counts as a function of exposure time

If the curve followed the red line at the high count rate end (and some CCDs do!) then you would know to keep your exposure to under 150.000

Page 35: Astronomical Detectors

Noise Tests for CCD: Gain

For Photon statistics the variance, = √Photons. Therefore 2 should be a measure of the number of detected photons

• Take a series of frames at with a constant light level

• Compute for frames

• Change the exposure time and take another series of frames calculating a new

• Plot the observed mean intensity versus the variance squared (2)

• The slope is a measure of the gain

Page 36: Astronomical Detectors

1.5 x 105

Mea

n In

tens

ity

Page 37: Astronomical Detectors

Problems and Pitfalls of CCD Usage

Saturation

If too many electrons are produced (too high intensity level) then the full well of the CCD is reached and the maximum count level will be obtained. Additional detected photons will not increase the measured intensity level:

ADU

Exposure time

65535 16-bit AD converter

Page 38: Astronomical Detectors

Problems and Pitfalls of CCDs

Blooming:

If the full well is exceeded then charge starts to spill over in the readout direction, i.e. columns. This can destroy data far away from the saturated pixels.

Page 39: Astronomical Detectors

Saturated stars

Blooming columns

Page 40: Astronomical Detectors

Anti-blooming CCD can eliminate this effect:

Blooming No blooming

Page 41: Astronomical Detectors

One solution: Anti-blooming CCDs

Anti-blooming CCDs have additional gates to bleed off the overflow due to saturation

The problem is these gates cover 30% of the pixel. This results in reduced sensitivity, smaller well depth, and lower resolution (gaps between pixels has increased)

Page 42: Astronomical Detectors

Residual Images

If the intensity is too high this will leave a residual image. Left is a normal CCD image. Right is a bias frame showing residual charge in the CCD. This can effect photometry

Solution: several dark frames readout or shift image between successive exposures

Page 43: Astronomical Detectors

Fringing

CCDs especially back illuminated ones are bonded to a glass plate

SiO2

Glue 1 mGlass

10 m

When the glass is illuminated by monochromatic light it creates a fringe pattern. Fringing can also occur without a glass plate due to the thickness of the CCD

Page 44: Astronomical Detectors

8400

8100

7850

7650

7460

7280

7080

6920

6760

6600

(Å)

Depending on the CCD fringing becomes important for wavelengths greater than about 6500 Å

Page 45: Astronomical Detectors

High readout noise CCDs (older ones) could seriously affect your Signal-to-Noise ratios of observations

Intensity

Sig

nal-t

o-N

oise

Rat

io

10310 Readout noise in electrons

Readout Noise

Page 46: Astronomical Detectors

Basic CCD reductions

• Subtract the Bias level. The bias level is an artificial constant added in the electronics to ensure that there are no negative pixels

• Divide by a Flat lamp to ensure that there are no pixel to pixel variations

• Optional: Removal of cosmic rays. These are high energy particles from space that create „hot pixels“ on your detector. Also can be caused by natural radiactive decay on the earth.

Page 47: Astronomical Detectors

Bias

Most CCDs have an overscan region, a portion of the chip that is not exposed so as to record the bias level. The prefered way is to record a separate bias (a dark with 0 sec exposure) frame and fit a surface to this. This is then subtracted from every frame as the first step in the reduction. If the bias changes with time then it is better to use the overscan region

Overscan region

Pixel

Page 48: Astronomical Detectors

Flat Field Division

Raw Frame Flat Field Raw divided by Flat

Every CCD has different pixel-to-pixel sensitivity, defects, dust particles, etc that not only make the image look bad, but if the sensitivity of pixels change with time can influence your results. Every observation must be divided by a flat field after bias subtraction. The flat field is an observation of a white lamp. For imaging one must take either sky flats, or dome flats (an illuminated white screen or dome observed with the telescope). For spectral observations „internal“ lamps (i.e. ones that illuminate the spectrograph, but not observed through the telescope are taken. Often even for spectroscopy „dome flats“ produce better results, particularly if you want to minimize fringing.

Page 49: Astronomical Detectors

Plate

3 x 3 deg (less since image is trimmed) in one exposure

Cost 100 Euros

Requires 20 m telescope to detect same number of photons as CCD

CCD

1/9 coverage

Cost: 120.000 Euros, ~1.000.000 Euros for same FOV

Cost per exposure over lifetime: < 1 Euro

CCD versus Photographic Plate

Page 50: Astronomical Detectors

CCD versus CMOS

CCD

Page 51: Astronomical Detectors

CCD versus CMOSCMOS (digital cameras)

Page 52: Astronomical Detectors

• In CMOS detectors the photon is converted to a voltage at the pixel level.

• Each pixel can be read independently at any time.

• No destruction of the charge and pixels can be read repeatedly to reduce the readout noise

• CMOS detectors have use in infrared arrays. Less experience with materials in the IR means that one cannot use a charge transfer method to readout.

• No problems with blooming in CMOS CCDs. Just read out the charge before it saturates. Can thus have a very large dynamic range.

Page 53: Astronomical Detectors

Multi-anode Microchannel Plate Array (MAMA) Detectors

MAMA detectors are essential photomultipliers. They operate a smaller voltages and are small so that they can be put into a two dimensional array. MAMAs are photon counting devices and each photon has a time tag.

Ultraviolet Detectors

Page 54: Astronomical Detectors

Quantum Efficiency of the Hubble Space Telescope STIS instrument

Page 55: Astronomical Detectors

Precision Analog Photon Address (PAPA) Detectors

And yes there is a PAPA detector…

Also for use in the UV.

See Papalios & Mertz, 1982, SPIE, Instrumentation in Astronomy IV, 331, p360

Page 56: Astronomical Detectors

Another method uses a CCD as a hybrid. The photocathode is used to produce an electron from the UV photon. These are accelerated to produce a large number that strike a phosphor that generates optical photons. Thse are coupled to a CCD with fibre optics

Ultraviolet Detectors

Page 57: Astronomical Detectors

X-ray CCD Detectors

CCDs can also be used for X-ray observations with some differences to optical CCDs:

• Optical CCDs produce one electron per photon. Many photons have to be detected before a measurable signal can be produced. A single X-ray photon can produce 100-1000 electrons (1 electron per 3.6 eV of energy). With low amplifier noise this can be measured. Thus X-ray CCDs are photon counting devices

• Requires one photon incident per pixel which means integration times of ~secs for most astronomical sources

• Lower CTE with losses of about 1%

Page 58: Astronomical Detectors

The detector of the future: a photon counter that measures each photon, its time of arrival, and its energy. This will be a detector and spectrograph in one.