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Reference pixels and readout modes: What we have learned thus far Don Figer, Bernie Rauscher, Mike Regan March 13, 2003 JWST Radiation Environment 1 March 13, 2003 Detectors Are Important for JWST 4 Duration of DRM NIR Observations [yrs] 1.E+02 Sunshield Signal [e-/sec/pix] 1.E+01 JWST requirement 1.E+00 JWST goal 1.E-01 R=5 1.E-02 Zodiacal Light 1.E-03 Dark current = 0.126 e - /sec 0.020 e - /sec 0.003 e - /sec 3 Spectra Images 2 1 R=1000 0 1.E-04 0.1 1 2 10 Wavelength [mm] JWST Radiation Environment 4 6 8 Read noise per exposure [electrons] 2 March 13, 2003 NIR Detector Characteristics Dark current Read noise Linearity Latent charge (persistence) Quantum efficiency (QE) Intra-pixel sensitivity Thermal stability Radiation immunity JWST Radiation Environment 3 March 13, 2003 IDTL Test System Controller Electronics Dewar Entrance Window Vacuum Hose He Lines JWST Radiation Environment 4 March 13, 2003 JWST MIR Detector Requirements JWST Radiation Environment 5 March 13, 2003 Dark Current Lowest measured dark current is ~0.005 e-/s/pixel. JWST Radiation Environment 6 March 13, 2003 IDTL Measurements: Read Noise Read noise is ~10 e- for Fowler-8. (system read noise is ~2.5 e-) JWST Radiation Environment 7 March 13, 2003 Reference Pixels All candidate JWST detectors have reference pixels Reference pixels are insensitive to light In all other ways, designed to mimic a regular light-sensitive pixel NIR detector testing at University of Rochester, University of Hawaii, and in the IDTL at STScI -> reference pixels work! Reference pixel subtraction is a standard part of IDTL data reduction pipeline Raytheon 2Kx2K NIR Module Rockwell 2Kx2K NIR Module Raytheon 1024x1024 MIR MUX JWST Radiation Environment 8 March 13, 2003 Use of Reference Pixels JWST’s NIR reference pixels are grouped in columns and rows Most fundamentally – reference pixels should be read out in exactly the same manner as any “normal” pixel – data from many reference pixels should be averaged to avoid adding noise to data We have begun to explore how reference pixels should be used. Approaches considered include the following. – row-by-row subtraction – maximal averaging (average all reference pixels together and subtract the mean) – spatial averaging – temporal averaging Spatial averaging is now a standard part of IDTL calibration pipeline JWST Radiation Environment 9 March 13, 2003 A Picture of IDTL System Noise Shorting resistor mounted at SCA location 1/f “tail” causes horizontal banding. Total noise is =7 e- rms per correlated double sample. JWST Radiation Environment 10 March 13, 2003 Averaging small numbers of reference pixels adds noise Averaged the last 4 columns in each row and performed row-by-row subtraction After Before JWST Radiation Environment 11 March 13, 2003 Spatial Averaging In spatial averaging, data from many (~64 rows) of reference pixels are used to calibrate each row in the image A Savitzky-Golay smoothing filter is used to fit a smooth and continuous reference column This reference column is subtracted from each column in the image Using this technique, we can remove some 1/f noise power within individual frames In practice, this technique works very well JWST Radiation Environment This is a standard part of the IDTL data calibration pipeline 12 March 13, 2003 Spatial Averaging: Before & After Before JWST Radiation Environment After 13 March 13, 2003 Temporal Averaging Dwell on the reference pixel and sample many times before clocking next pixel Potentially removes most 1/f Not tried this in IDTL yet. U. Hawaii has reported some problems with reference pixels heating up JWST Radiation Environment 14 March 13, 2003 Temporal Averaging: Before & After Before JWST Radiation Environment After 15 March 13, 2003 Summary of Reference Pixel Calibration Methods Spatial averaging works well using a Rockwell HAWAII-1RG detector Based on conversations with U. Rochester, we foresee no problems with SB-304 Temporal Averaging is promising. More work needed using real detectors. JWST Radiation Environment 16 March 13, 2003 Summary Reference pixels work and are an invaluable part of the data calibration pipeline We have explored three techniques for using reference pixels – – – – row-by-row subtractions, maximal averaging, spatial averaging, & temporal averaging Averaging at the end of row will not work Spatial averaging works well and is robust We have found: – – – – – – dark current is low (~0.01 e-/s/pixel) glow is very small noise goes down as roughly 1/root(N) up to 8 reads (at least) persistence is observed JWST requirements seem realizable saving all the data are necessary to mitigate unforeseen detector effects, such as the non-linear bias drift after reset ("shading" in NICMOS). Note that ref pixels do not get rid of all of the effect. Cosmic ray rejection requires careful handling of reference pixels, output voltage drifts, and knowledge about previous history (persistence) JWST Radiation Environment 17 March 13, 2003 Appendix JWST Radiation Environment 18 March 13, 2003 NIR Detector Effects NICMOS Dark current Bias drifts QE variations Amplifier glow JWST Radiation Environment 19 March 13, 2003 NIR Detector Effects NICMOS Persistence JWST Radiation Environment 20 March 13, 2003 NIR Detector Effects NICMOS DC bias level drift Ghosts JWST Radiation Environment 21 March 13, 2003 NIR Detector Effects NICMOS Linearity Well depth JWST Radiation Environment 22 March 13, 2003 NIR Detector Effects NICMOS QE Dark current “bump” JWST Radiation Environment 23 March 13, 2003