Survey
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Applications of Physics to Astronomical Systems Lecture 10 17) Astronomical Detectors Almost all the information we have about astronomical objects comes from observations of various forms of electromagnetic radiation. (The main exceptions being “cosmic rays”, which are high energy particles, and recently neutrinos. The detection of gravitational waves and dark matter are hopes for the future.) The wavelengths used cover an enormous range and the techniques employed to detect the photons vary accordingly. (i) Extremely High Energy Gamma Rays ~1012 to ~1015 eV These are produced by collisions in natural particle accelerators such as pulsars. They interact with atoms high in the earth’s atmosphere and produce a shower of particles. These are travelling faster than the speed of light in the air and this produces a cone of light (called Cerenkov radiation) somewhat analogous to a shock-wave from a supersonic aircraft. This is seen as a pulse on the ground and can be collected by large relatively crude “light-buckets”. (ii) Gamma Rays ~106 to ~108 eV There is a flux of these from the milky way produced by collisions between cosmic rays and interstellar atoms. More interesting are the gamma-ray bursts which last for just a few seconds but are now known to be from such distant galaxies that they are the most energetic events yet observed. Such photons are stopped high in the atmosphere so space satellites are required. The detection is based on production of electron-positron pairs when the gamma passes close to an atomic nucleus. The ionisation these produce can then be observed and the energy and direction of the gamma-ray reconstructed. (iii) X - rays ~103 to ~105 eV These are produced by a wide range of very hot or energetic objects ranging from white dwarf stars to the accretion disks around massive black holes. Satellites still have to be used as the atmosphere is very opaque to X-rays. At these wavelengths (1 keV = 1.2 nm) it becomes possible to make images by using grazing incidence mirrors. These are “nested” to get increased collecting area. The detectors themselves are generally based on the ionisation produced by the photons. The amount of charge is proportional to the energy of the Xray photon so this acts as a crude spectrometer. Higher resolution spectrometers can be made by using diffraction, e.g. Bragg diffraction from crystal lattices. (iv) UV, visible and near IR ~1 to ~10 eV (1.2 microns to 120 nm) This waveband remains the workhorse of astronomy. Obviously it enables us to see the stars but also to observe spectra which contain a wealth of information including abundances of elements, temperatures and (via the Doppler shift) velocities. The atmosphere is transparent from about 2 microns to 330 nm. Originally detection was by the human eye, and then photographic plates. These have very large capacity (of order 10 9 “pixels”) and so were excellent for surveys, but the efficiency (in terms of photons detected) and the linearity are poor. Electronic detectors have now replaced photographic plates in almost all applications. The first of these relied on the photo-electric effect where electrons are expelled from a phospher into a vacuum. Applying a voltage accelerates the electrons and if these are allowed to fall on a further phospher or metal surface each will produce a shower of electrons. Multiple stages provide the basis of the photomultiplier tube, which produces a clear pulse for each photon. Counting the photons provides linear and efficient detection, with good time resolution (< 1 microsec) but no spatial information. Almost all modern detectors are however based on solid-state devices. Here the photons are made to generate electron-hole pairs in a semiconductor. Silicon is used for wavelengths shorter than about 1 micron. The electrons are held in potential wells, forming the pixels, until the end of the exposure. The charges are then shuffled across and down by applying voltages to sets of electrodes under the cells. This gives rise to the name Charge Coupled Device (CCD). The charges are then read out by a low noise amplifier and digitized. Pixel sizes are in the range 10 to 30 microns and up to 10 7 can now be made on a chip. For astronomy they normally operate at about 180K to reduce “dark current”. Efficiency can be > 50% and linearity is very good. (v) mid- IR ~(20 to 2 microns) and far-IR (200 to 20 microns) Semi-conductors can also be used here but one has to go to more exotic materials such as indium antimonide and gallium-doped germanium is order to have the energy gap between the valence band and the conduction band less than the photon energy. This means that we have to go to progressively lower temperatures as the wavelength increases to limit thermal excitation of electron-hole pairs. Liquid helium cooling (4K) is typical. As yet the detectors have fewer pixels than in the optical and for the longer wavelengths have to mounted on top of silicon CCD’s for the readout. (vi) Sub-millimetre (1mm to 200 microns). 1 mm is 300 GHz. Here the photons are too weak to detect individually. For broad-band signals we use a “bolometer” to measure the heat absorbed by a small substrate in a very cold ( ~ 0.1 K) cavity. Modulation is essential but sensitivity of better than 10 –15 W can be achieved. For spectral lines it is better to use – the coherent techniques. Here the electric field is measured directly. For frequencies above 100 GHz we cannot yet make amplifiers so a mixer is used to down-convert the signal. The best mixers are Superconductor-Insulator-Superconductor (SIS) devices which have a very sharp non-linearity and can be made very small. (vii) Radio – below ~ 100 GHz. The electric field is collected by an aerial (typically a horn) and converted into a current which ca then be amplified, down-converted and digitised. Because the signals have been gathered coherently interferometry is possible. Very high angular resolution can then be obtained, in the extreme case by tape-recording the voltages at separate telescopes and then correlating them later.