Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

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Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL. Charge to Breakout Sessions. Breakout groups will determine: the most pressing questions in their area that leverage QLIDs the most important detector characteristics for answering these questions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

Page 1: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL
Page 2: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

Astrophysics Breakout

Don FigerRIT, RIDL

Page 3: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

3IT Collaboratory 2009 Research Symposium

Charge to Breakout Sessions• Breakout groups will determine:

– the most pressing questions in their area that leverage QLIDs– the most important detector characteristics for answering these questions– the specific technologies that are most promising for achieving these

characteristics– the hurdles for implementing these technologies– the R&D roadmap for overcoming these hurdles– the funding opportunities for executing the R&D roadmap

• The four areas are:– biomedical– astrophysics– Earth system science– defense/homeland security

• Group leads will present findings in the final session of the workshop.

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Page 4: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

4IT Collaboratory 2009 Research Symposium

Breakout Session Leads

• Biomedical Tim Tredwell

• AstrophysicsDon Figer

• Earth Systems ScienceJeff Puschell

• Defensee/Homeland SecurityMark Bocko

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Page 5: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

5IT Collaboratory 2009 Research Symposium

The Top Five Science Drivers for Detectors: Astrophysics1. What is dark energy? (QE, read noise, DC)2. What is dark matter? (QE, read noise, DC)3. What processes alter the surfaces of

planets/moons? (thermal imaging, LIDAR, dynamic features with DFPA)

4. Do Earth-like planets exist?5. Does extraterrestrial life exist? (O3, MIR)

6. When was the Universe enriched with metals? 7. How were galaxies assembled?

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Page 6: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

6IT Collaboratory 2009 Research Symposium

The Top Detector Characteristics for: Astrophysics1. in-pixel wavelength discrimination2. high QE across broad range 3. low dark current4. zero read noise5. time-tagging (for LIDAR)6. larger formats (>10K x 10K)7. lower power, higher temp. operation8. lower cost operation (e.g. standardized ASIC, easier

than SIDECAR)9. high dynamic range: 1 - 1E7 photons10. high speed capabilities, yet retain low noise

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Page 7: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

7IT Collaboratory 2009 Research Symposium

Reference Chart: Key Detector Characteristics

DarkCurrentDark

Current λ/Δλλ/ΔλQEQE λλReadNoise

ReadNoise ΔtΔt

Quantum-Limited Imaging Detector

PP

EarthSystemScience

EarthSystemScience

BiomedicalImaging

BiomedicalImaging

HomelandSafety

HomelandSafety DefenseDefense

Page 8: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

8IT Collaboratory 2009 Research Symposium

Detector Performance Requirements for: Astrophysics

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Parameter Current Goal

Format

Pixel Size

Read Noise

Dark Current

QE

Latent Image

Flux Rate Capacity

Operating Temperature

Fill Factor

Radiation Immunity

Susceptibility to Radiation Transients

Technology Readiness Level

Page 9: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

9IT Collaboratory 2009 Research Symposium

The Most Promising Detector Technologies for: Astrophysics1. TES, SSPD: wavelength detection2. SSPD, GM-APD: zero read noise3. MCP: single photon counting UV4. GM-APD: time-tagging5. Digital solid state photomultiplier array (BiB,

Rockwell Anaheim/Boeing)6. DFPA

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Page 10: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

10IT Collaboratory 2009 Research Symposium

Hurdles for the Most Promising Detector Technologies for: Astrophysics

1. TES: QE, temperature, format2. GM-APD: afterpulsing3. SSPD: cold operation4. TES: extremely cold, not ideal wavelength

coverage5. DFPA: for low backgrounds??

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Page 11: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

11IT Collaboratory 2009 Research Symposium

Detector R&D Roadmap for: Astrophysics

1. GM-APDa) demonstrate 1 e-/s/pixelb) demonstrate ~64x64 diode/ROIC array at 150 Kc) design megapixel array and demonstrate at telescope

2. SSPD (NbN)a) demonstrate an array with high QE

3. TESa) demonstrate QE vs. lambda from UV to MIRb) find magic material that operates at higher Tc) demonstrate low noise

4. DFPAa) demonstrate low background capabilityb) demonstrate long integration timec) demonstrate low noise

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Page 12: Astrophysics Breakout Don Figer RIT, RIDL

12IT Collaboratory 2009 Research Symposium

Funding Possibilities: Astrophysics

1. NASA ROSES APRA, PIDDP2. NSF ATI3. Private4. DARPA MTO BAA5. Stimulus funding

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