Bibcode
DOI
Feautrier, Philippe; Gach, Jean-Luc; Balard, Philippe; Guillaume, Christian; Downing, Mark; Hubin, Norbert; Stadler, Eric; Magnard, Yves; Skegg, Michael; Robbins, Mark; Denney, Sandy; Suske, Wolfgang; Jorden, Paul; Wheeler, Patrick; Pool, Peter; Bell, Ray; Burt, David; Davies, Ian; Reyes, Javier; Meyer, Manfred; Baade, Dietrich; Kasper, Markus; Arsenault, Robin; Fusco, Thierry; Díaz, J. J.
Bibliographical reference
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Volume 123, issue 901, pp.263-274
Advertised on:
3
2011
Citations
15
Refereed citations
6
Description
For the first time, subelectron readout noise has been achieved with a
camera dedicated to astronomical wavefront-sensing applications. The
OCam system demonstrated this performance at a 1300 Hz frame rate and
with 240 × 240 pixel frame size. ESO and JRA2 OPTICON jointly
funded e2v Technologies to develop a custom CCD for adaptive optics (AO)
wavefront-sensing applications. The device, called CCD220, is a compact
Peltier-cooled 240 × 240 pixel frame-transfer eight-output
back-illuminated sensor using the EMCCD technology. This article
demonstrates, for the first time, subelectron readout noise at frame
rates from 25 Hz to 1300 Hz and dark current lower than 0.01
e- pixel-1 frame-1 . It reports on the
quantitative performance characterization of OCam and the CCD220,
including readout noise, dark current, multiplication gain, quantum
efficiency, and charge transfer efficiency. OCam includes a low-noise
preamplifier stage, a digital board to generate the clocks, and a
microcontroller. The data acquisition system includes a user-friendly
timer file editor to generate any type of clocking scheme. A second
version of OCam, called OCam2 , has been designed to offer
enhanced performance, a completely sealed camera package, and an
additional Peltier stage to facilitate operation on a telescope or
environmentally challenging applications. New features of
OCam2 are presented in this article. This instrumental
development will strongly impact the performance of the most advanced AO
systems to come.