Advanced Photon Counting Imaging Detectors with 100ps Timing for Astronomical and Space Sensing Applications

Oswald Siegmund (Space Sciences Laboratory, U.C. Berkeley), John Vallerga, Barry Welsh (Space Sciences Laboratory, U.C. Berkeley), Jason McPhate (Space Sciences Laboratory, U.C. Berkeley), Mike Rabin (Los Alamos National Laboratory), Jeffrey Bloch, (Los Alamos National Laboratory)

Keywords: Telescopes, Instrumentation

Abstract:

In recent years EAG has implemented a variety of high-resolution, large format, photon-counting MCP detectors in space instrumentation for satellite FUSE, GALEX, IMAGE, SOHO, HST-COS, rocket, and shuttle payloads. Our scheme of choice has been delay line readouts encoding photon event position centroids, by determination of the difference in arrival time of the event charge at the two ends of a distributed resistive-capacitive (RC) delay line. Our most commonly used delay line configuration is the cross delay line (XDL). In its simplest form the delay-line encoding electronics consists of a fast amplifier for each end of the delay line, followed by time-to-digital converters (TDC’s). We have achieved resolutions of < 25 µm in tests over 65 mm x 65 mm (3k x3k resolution elements) with excellent linearity. Using high speed TDC’s, we have been able to encode event positions for random photon rates of ~1 MHz, while time tagging events using the MCP output signal to better than 100 ps. The unique ability to record photon X,Y,T high fidelity information has advantages over “frame driven” recording devices for some important applications. For example we have built open face and sealed tube cross delay line detectors used for biological fluorescence lifetime imaging, observation of flare stars, orbital satellites and space debris with the GALEX satellite, and time resolved imaging of the Crab Pulsar with a telescope as small as 1m. Although microchannel plate delay line detectors meet many of the imaging and timing demands of various applications, they have limitations. The relatively high gain (107) reduces lifetime and local counting rate, and the fixed delay (10’s of ns) makes multiple simultaneous event recording problematic. To overcome these limitations we have begun development of cross strip readout anodes for microchannel plate detectors. The cross strip (XS) anode is a coarse (~0.5 mm) multi-layer metal and ceramic pattern of crossed fingers on an alumina substrate. The charge cloud is matched to the anode period so that it is collected on several neighboring fingers to ensure an accurate event charge centroid can be determined. Each finger of the anode is connected to a low noise charge sensitive amplifier and followed by subsequent A/D conversion of individual strip charge values and a hardware centroid determination of better than 1/100 of a strip are possible. Recently we have commissioned a full 32 x 32 mm XS open face laboratory detector and demonstrated excellent resolution (<6 µm FWHM, ~5k x 5k resolution) using low MCP gain (<5 x 105) thus increasing the MCP local counting rate capacity and overall lifetime of the detector system. In collaboration with Los Alamos National Laboratory, NASA and NSF we are developing high rate (>107 Hz) XS encoding electronics that will encode temporally simultaneous events (non spatially overlapping). Sealed tube XS detectors with GaAs and other photocathodes are also under development to increase detection efficiency and extend the sensitivity range.
This type of sensor could be a significant enabling technology for several important applications, including airborne and space situational awareness, high-speed adaptive optics (by increasing the SNR and speed in the control loop), astronomy of transient and time-variable sources, optical metrology, and secure quantum communication (as a receiver of cryptographic keys for three-dimensional imaging), single-molecule fluorescence lifetime microscopy (simultaneously tracking and measuring ~1000 molecules), optical/NIR LIDAR, hybrid mass spectrometry and optical night-time/reconnaissance (LANL-ASPIRE).

Date of Conference: September 10-14, 2006

Track: Telescopes and Instrumentation

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