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Update to Near Infrared System for SNAP

Update to Near Infrared System for SNAP. Vic Scarpine FNAL SNAP Electronics Meeting March 11, 2003. Topics. SNAP NIR Overview Visit to University of Michigan What is Michigan doing? Discussions on NIR issues What can Fermilab do?.

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Update to Near Infrared System for SNAP

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  1. Update to Near Infrared System for SNAP Vic Scarpine FNAL SNAP Electronics Meeting March 11, 2003

  2. Topics • SNAP NIR Overview • Visit to University of Michigan • What is Michigan doing? • Discussions on NIR issues • What can Fermilab do?

  3. State-of-the-art 2k x 2k HgCdTe detector with 1.7 mm cutoff under development by RSC NIR System Concept • 150 NIR Megapixels: • 36 (2k  2k) 18 mm HgCdTe detectors (0.34 sq. deg) • 3 special bandpass filters covering 1.0 –1.7 mm in NIR • T = 140K (to limit dark current) HgCdTe

  4. NIR System: Performance Goals

  5. Risk Assessment Presented to DOE • Read Noise • Initial measurements of 1.7m devices have noise problem • Additional production runs may be needed • Hope that WFC3 solves this problem or… • May be to modify readout strategy to achieve required read noise • Intrapixel Variation • May not be acceptable for photometry • Rockwell may be able to “sculpt” electric field • Simulation shows dithering is a solution but needs to be measured • How do you spec this for a vendor?

  6. Risk Assessment Presented to DOE • Qualification Testing • Need to define characterization and qualification of large number of HgCdTe devices • To obtain 44 science grade devices need to test at least several hundred devices • For NSGT 25 devices they are planning three large test and qualification facilities

  7. SNAP NIR Players • Greg Tarle, Univ of Michigan – NIR R&D coordinator • Univ of Michigan - have begun to set up HgCdTe evaluation facility • Number of professors, research scientists, post-docs, grad student • ~ 3-4 full-time equivalent • Univ of Indiana – working with Michigan on filters and quantum efficiency measurements • LBL – development of readout electronics?? • Don Figer – infrared detectors consultant at Space Telescope Science Institute • Rockwell – HgCdTe FPA supplier. Possible readout chip. • Ratheon – developing HgCdTe FPA • Others??? Caltech/JPL/UCLA?

  8. Main NIR R&D Activities* • Establish a facility for testing and characterizing NIR FPAs at University of Michigan • Study detector read noise and reduction with multiple reads • Study intrapixel variations and impact on photometry • Develop mechanical and thermal concept for NIR imager • Develop plan for testing and qualifying large numbers of HgCdTe FPAs • Produce R&D phase deliverables • Produce realistic cost and schedule estimates for CDR *SNAP R&D Plan

  9. Michigan Infrared Detector Lab • Comparative testing and evaluation of industrial supplied HgCdTe FPAs • Characterize read noise, dark current and quantum efficiency • Study intra-pixel variations and impact on photometry • Determine optimum sampling strategy for reducing RMS read-out • Establish facilities for receiving and qualifying NIR FPAs • Optimize calibration techniques and strategies • Develop mechanical and thermal concept for NIR imager in an integrated focal plane

  10. Michigan Infrared Detector Lab • Lab being established • dewar/vacuum system built • Low noise DAQ electronics purchased and being integrated • Testing multiplexers to debug system and set noise floor • Need to acquire science grade FPA ($$$) • Test setup ~ $100K

  11. U of M Visit - Issues • New question about Rockwell FPA pixel stability • Dark current appears function of readout time • Is this charge trapping effect? • If so them has many effects: i.e. linearity, image lag • Rockwell vs Ratheon • Rockwell has made 1.7m for WFC3 • Ratheon has made 2k x 2k, 2.5m for VISTA • Both want ~> $500K for development of SNAP 2k x 2k 1.7m prototypes • Time to receive first science grade test FPA critical • U of M may purchase and reimbursed by DOE • Not clear why they can’t get one of the WFC3 rejects for testing

  12. U of M Visit - Issues • Electronics Readout Chip • Use LBL CCD chip? • Rockwell may develop readout chip • Will this meet SNAP requirements? • Not sure if Raytheon making a chip • Other players??? • Does FNAL have an interest here? Can we do a better job? • Political Question • Will NIR completely end up in NASA’s hands?

  13. U of M Visit - Issues • Device characterization and testing plan • Question of how to spec and measure NIR FPA parameters • Intrapixel variance • Pixel stablility • Scientific Issues – Tim McKay • Should the NIR format be re-evaluated for non-SN science? • Are the filters optimized? • Is SNAP pushing 1.7m too hard? • Backing off may have small effect on SN search but allow for more imaging time?

  14. What can Fermilab do for NIR? • Develop a test and qualification site • Fermilab experience in detector measurements • About a year away - allows time to setup test system • Already too many players? • ~ $100K and few full-time equivalent • Simulation • Study optimizing NIR detectors for science • Clustering, weak lensing • FNAL astrophysicist involvement • Detector simulation? • Intrapixel variation, dithering, charge-trapping • Fermilab can help now

  15. Ongoing HgCdTe Characterization Efforts • Detector Characterization Lab (DCL) at Goddard Space Flight Center (PI Ed Cheng) The DCL currently supports the characterization of HgCdTe detectors for the Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3 instrument. • NASA has funded four laboratories to develop and assess the quality of NGST prototype detectors: • The University of Hawaii Laboratory (PI Donald Hall) will develop and characterize HgCdTe detectors manufactured by Rockwell Scientific. • The University of Rochester Laboratory (PI William Forrest) will develop and characterize InSb detectors made by Raytheon Infrared Operations. • The Independent Detector Testing Laboratory (PI Don Figer) at Space Telescope Science Institute and the Johns Hopkins University will characterize both HgCdTe and InSb detectors in a comparative hardware setup. • The Laboratory at NASA Ames Research Center (PI Craig McCreight) is developing and characterizing Si:As mid-infrared detectors.

  16. What can Fermilab do for NIR? • Readout chip development • Fermilab has lots of ASIC experience • Use Fermilab ASIC experience someplace in SNAP • If interested then when do we start? • Investigate non-HgCdTe technologies • Look into issues for making large format InGaAs FPAs – compile information • Is it too much development time for SNAP? • Are there other players looking down this road?

  17. E-Mail from Michael Levi to John Marriner Dear John, Just to correct an important issue in your write-up, I need to point out that there is another major axis in the NIR area. We have "married“ the Michigan effort to a major Caltech/JPL/UCLA effort in the NIR. The Caltech group is heavily involved in the development and testing of the commercial readout chip as well as involved with JPL & UCLA in the development (and deploying on telescopes) of the detector technology. In the next two years the issue with the detector development is a solid-state physics problem as opposed to straight-out testing. The NIR detectors do not currently meet our specifications and we had to bring NIR experts in to work on this aspect. The development of a second axis was a management decision to bring in world-class experts in NIR. So, the FNAL interest in this area would be a third effort -- thus would require a careful coordination of interests, skills, and timing. Thanks for listening, Michael

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