scholarly journals Detectivity optimization to detect of ultraweak light fluxes with an EM-CCD as binary photon counter array

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ibtissame Khaoua ◽  
Guillaume Graciani ◽  
Andrey Kim ◽  
François Amblard

AbstractFor a wide range of purposes, one faces the challenge to detect light from extremely faint and spatially extended sources. In such cases, detector noises dominate over the photon noise of the source, and quantum detectors in photon counting mode are generally the best option. Here, we combine a statistical model with an in-depth analysis of detector noises and calibration experiments, and we show that visible light can be detected with an electron-multiplying charge-coupled devices (EM-CCD) with a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of 3 for fluxes less than $$30\,{\text{photon}}\,{\text{s}}^{ - 1} \,{\text{cm}}^{ - 2}$$ 30 photon s - 1 cm - 2 . For green photons, this corresponds to 12 aW $${\text{cm}}^{ - 2}$$ cm - 2 ≈ $$9{ } \times 10^{ - 11}$$ 9 × 10 - 11 lux, i.e. 15 orders of magnitude less than typical daylight. The strong nonlinearity of the SNR with the sampling time leads to a dynamic range of detection of 4 orders of magnitude. To detect possibly varying light fluxes, we operate in conditions of maximal detectivity $${\mathcal{D}}$$ D rather than maximal SNR. Given the quantum efficiency $$QE\left( \lambda \right)$$ Q E λ of the detector, we find $${ \mathcal{D}} = 0.015\,{\text{photon}}^{ - 1} \,{\text{s}}^{1/2} \,{\text{cm}}$$ D = 0.015 photon - 1 s 1 / 2 cm , and a non-negligible sensitivity to blackbody radiation for T > 50 °C. This work should help design highly sensitive luminescence detection methods and develop experiments to explore dynamic phenomena involving ultra-weak luminescence in biology, chemistry, and material sciences.

2010 ◽  
Vol 1 (SRMS-7) ◽  
Author(s):  
David Pennicard ◽  
Heinz Graafsma ◽  
Michael Lohmann

The new synchrotron light source PETRA-III produced its first beam last year. The extremely high brilliance of PETRA-III and the large energy range of many of its beamlines make it useful for a wide range of experiments, particularly in materials science. The detectors at PETRA-III will need to meet several requirements, such as operation across a wide dynamic range, high-speed readout and good quantum efficiency even at high photon energies. PETRA-III beamlines with lower photon energies will typically be equipped with photon-counting silicon detectors for two-dimensional detection and silicon drift detectors for spectroscopy and higher-energy beamlines will use scintillators coupled to cameras or photomultiplier tubes. Longer-term developments include ‘high-Z’ semiconductors for detecting high-energy X-rays, photon-counting readout chips with smaller pixels and higher frame rates and pixellated avalanche photodiodes for time-resolved experiments.


Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 646 ◽  
Author(s):  
Munezza Ata Khan ◽  
Mohammad Mujahid

Interleukin 6 (IL-6), being a major component of homeostasis, immunomodulation, and hematopoiesis, manifests multiple pathological conditions when upregulated in response to viral, microbial, carcinogenic, or autoimmune stimuli. High fidelity immunosensors offer real-time monitoring of IL-6 and facilitate early prognosis of life-threatening diseases. Different approaches to augment robustness and enhance overall performance of biosensors have been demonstrated over the past few years. Electrochemical- and fluorescence-based detection methods with integrated electronics have been subjects of intensive research due to their ability to offer a better signal-to-noise ratio, high specificity, ultra-sensitivity, and wide dynamic range. In this review, the pleiotropic role of IL-6 and its clinical significance is discussed in detail, followed by detection schemes devised so far for their quantitative analysis. A critical review on underlying signal amplification strategies and performance of electrochemical and optical biosensors is presented. In conclusion, we discuss the reliability and feasibility of the proposed detection technologies for commercial applications.


Author(s):  
Jing Du ◽  
Yihua Yan ◽  
Wei Wang ◽  
Donghao Liu

AbstractThe MUSER is a solar-dedicated radio interferometric array, which will observe the Sun over a wide range of radio frequencies (0.4–15 GHz), and make high time, space and frequency resolution images of the Sun simultaneously. MUSER is located in Mingantu Station in Inner Mongolia of China, which is about 400 kilometres away from Beijing. MUSER consists of two arrays: MUSER-I and MUSER-II. MUSER-I contains 40 antennas with 4.5-m aperture operating at 400 MHz to 2 GHz. MUSER-II contains 60 antennas with 2-m aperture operating at 2 to 15 GHz. Currently, MUSER has already been established and entered into the stage of test observation. This work is focus on the imaging performance of MUSER-I. This paper introduces MUSER-I briefly, presents the analysis of the array configurations, and evaluates the image quality mainly using the dynamic range, fidelity index, and the peak signal-to-noise ratio, also make some actual solar model simulations with CASA, the results will be shown below.


2018 ◽  
Vol 615 ◽  
pp. A34 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. Wilby ◽  
C. U. Keller ◽  
J.-F. Sauvage ◽  
K. Dohlen ◽  
T. Fusco ◽  
...  

Context. The low wind effect (LWE) refers to a characteristic set of quasi-static wavefront aberrations seen consistently by the SPHERE instrument when dome-level wind speeds drop below 3 ms−1. The LWE produces bright low-order speckles in the stellar point-spread function (PSF), which severely limit the contrast performance of SPHERE under otherwise optimal observing conditions. Aims. In this paper we propose the Fast & Furious (F&F) phase diversity algorithm as a viable software-only solution for real-time LWE compensation, which would utilise image sequences from the SPHERE differential tip-tilt sensor (DTTS) and apply corrections via reference slope offsets on the AO system’s Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor. Methods. We evaluated the closed-loop performance of F&F on the MITHIC high-contrast test-bench, under conditions emulating LWE-affected DTTS images. These results were contrasted with predictive simulations for a variety of convergence tests, in order to assess the expected performance of an on-sky implementation of F&F in SPHERE. Results. The algorithm was found to be capable of returning LWE-affected images to Strehl ratios of greater than 90% within five iterations, for all appropriate laboratory test cases. These results are highly representative of predictive simulations, and demonstrate stability of the algorithm against a wide range of factors including low image signal-to-noise ratio (S/N), small image field of view, and amplitude errors. It was also found in simulation that closed-loop stability can be preserved down to image S/N as low as five while still improving overall wavefront quality, allowing for reliable operation even on faint targets. Conclusions. The Fast & Furious algorithm is an extremely promising solution for real-time compensation of the LWE, which can operate simultaneously with science observations and may be implemented in SPHERE without requiring additional hardware. The robustness and relatively large effective dynamic range of F&F also make it suitable for general wavefront optimisation applications, including the co-phasing of segmented ELT-class telescopes.


2008 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 101-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takeyoshi Taguchi ◽  
Christian Brönnimann ◽  
Eric F. Eikenberry

A novel type X-ray detector, called PILATUS, has been developed at the Paul Scherrer Institut in Switzerland during the last decade. PILATUS detectors are two-dimensional hybrid pixel array detectors, which operate in single-photon counting mode. PILATUS detectors feature a very wide dynamic range (1:1 000 000), very short readout time (<3.0 ms), no readout noise, and very high counting rate (>2×106counts/s/pixel). In addition, a lower energy threshold can be set in order to suppress fluorescence background from the sample, thus a very good signal-to-noise ratio is achieved. The combination of these features for area detectors is unique and thus the PILATUS detectors are considered to be the next generation X-ray detectors. The basic building block of all the detectors is the PILATUS module having an active area of 83.8×33.5 mm2. The PILATUS 100K is a complete detector system with one module. PILATUS detector systems can have other configurations, including large area systems consisting of 20 to 60 modules that can cover up to an area of 431×448 mm2. Such large systems are mainly used for macromolecular structure determination, such as protein crystallography and small angle X-ray scattering. The PILATUS 100K detector can be easily adapted to many systems; the single-module detector is integrated to an in-house X-ray diffraction (XRD) system. Examples of XRD measurements with the PILATUS 100K detector are given.


1993 ◽  
Vol 302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Eisen ◽  
E. Polak

ABSTRACTThe performance characteristics of a linear array composed of several hundred miniature spectroscopy grade CdTe detectors are described. The linear array is utilized in a X-ray security imaging system. It operates either in an energy dispersive mode to highlight certain atomic elements in the luggage or in a regular mode for obtaining only the transmission image of the luggage. The array functions in the photon counting mode and tolerates count rates as high as 106 counts/sec. The array has high quantum efficiency and good spatial resolution which result in excellent image quality. The dynamic range, the electronic noise, the energy resolution, the homogeneity of response among detectors and the image quality are presented.


2014 ◽  
Vol 996 ◽  
pp. 203-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dubravka Sisak Jung ◽  
Lasse Suominen ◽  
Jari Parantainen ◽  
Christoph Hoermann

MYTHEN is a single-photon-counting strip detector. Its main features are high spatial resolution, zero noise, fluorescence suppression, fast readout, high dynamic range, radiation-hard and maintenance-free design. Perspectives of such a detector in residual stress measurements involve: (i) Measurements of absorbing/thick materials (ii) Well resolved peaks (iii) excellent signal-to-noise ratio (iv) Analysis of alloys (v) Fast data collection (vi) Accurate low content retained austenite measurements (vii) in situ measurements and mapping (viii) infinite life cycle. Technical details and application in synchrotron and laboratory diffractometers will be presented.


Author(s):  
Andreas Förster ◽  
Stefan Brandstetter ◽  
Clemens Schulze-Briese

Hybrid photon counting (HPC) detectors have radically transformed basic research at synchrotron light sources since 2006. They excel at X-ray diffraction applications in the energy range from 2 to 100 keV. The main reasons for their superiority are the direct detection of individual photons and the accurate determination of scattering and diffraction intensities over an extremely high dynamic range. The detectors were first adopted in macromolecular crystallography where they revolutionized data collection. They were soon also used for small-angle scattering, coherent scattering, powder X-ray diffraction, spectroscopy and increasingly high-energy applications. Here, we will briefly survey the history of HPC detectors, explain their technology and then show in detail how improved detection has transformed a wide range of experimental techniques. We will end with an outlook to the future, which will probably see HPC technology find even broader use, for example, in electron microscopy and medical applications. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Fifty years of synchrotron science: achievements and opportunities’.


1994 ◽  
Vol 299 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Eisen ◽  
E. Polak

AbstractThe performance characteristics of a linear array composed of several hundred miniature spectroscopy grade CdTe detectors are described. The linear array is utilized in a X-ray security imaging system. It operates either in an energy dispersive mode to highlight certain atomic elements in the luggage or in a regular mode for obtaining only the transmission image of the luggage. The array functions in the photon counting mode and tolerates count rates as high as 106 counts/sec. The array has high quantum efficiency and good spatial resolution which result in excellent image quality. The dynamic range, the electronic noise, the energy resolution, the homogeneity of response among detectors and the image quality are presented.


1994 ◽  
Vol 48 (9) ◽  
pp. 1102-1110 ◽  
Author(s):  
John W. Judge ◽  
Victoria L. McGuffin

The photovoltaic method for the detection of liquid-phase photoionization in the absence of an applied electric field is compared to the traditional photoconductive method. Each system is characterized by means of signal and signal-to-noise ratio measurements with respect to laser pulse energy, applied voltage, electrode separation distance, solute concentration, and solvent composition. Although both techniques exhibit similar detection limits (1 × 10−7 M) for solutes in polar solvents such as methanol and water, the photovoltaic technique has a more extensive linear dynamic range (103). Moreover, this technique allows detection of solutes in ionic solutions with comparable detectability and linearity.


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