The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope project is NASA's next flagship astrophysics mission to study dark energy, dark matter, and exoplanets along with the innumerable topics that will be enabled by the infrared survey telescope's instruments. The Wide Field Instrument contains a focal plane of 18 newly developed Teledyne H4RG-10 HgCdTe detectors. Roman's focal plane completed its first system level thermal vacuum test at NASA Goddard in 2022, when an increase in dark current compared to component level testing was observed for several detectors. Roman chartered an anomaly review board (ARB) and in collaboration with Teledyne undertook a testing program to help identify possible root cause and select from Roman's spare inventory suitable replacement detectors for devices that had significantly degraded. A possible root cause was determined by the ARB along with recommendations for how to prevent further degradation. We summarize the initial observation of the detector anomaly, present the detector testing strategy to find suitable spares and provide evidence of root cause, share the general findings of the ARB, and show new data showing the improved dark current performance.
NEO Surveyor is a NASA Planetary Defense Coordination Office mission designed to detect and track >2/3 of potentially hazardous asteroids >140 m in diameter during its 5-year prime mission. NEO Surveyor entered Phase B in June 2021 and is scheduled to launch in 2026 to survey the sky in two infrared bands. The infrared detectors are a key technology for the mission and have been the subject of focused development for more than a decade. In this paper, we report test results for recently produced detectors and describe design elements of the focal plane module relevant to operations for NEO Surveyor.
Near-Earth Object (NEO) Surveyor, a NASA planetary defense space mission, is currently in Phase B with a launch date in 2026. NEO Surveyor is an infrared telescope designed to detect and characterize Potentially Hazardous Asteroids (PHAs). The required sensors leverage the space flight heritage and further development over the last 15 years of HgCdTe arrays to detect infrared light spanning from 4 to 10 μm. NEO Surveyor will employ eight passively cooled HgCdTe Sensor Chip Assemblies (SCAs) across two bands, each band consisting of a 1x4 SCA mosaic to cover a wide field of view. Four of these SCAs have a >5.5 μm cutoff wavelength and cover the shorter 4-5.2 μm (NC1) band, while four SCAs will have a >10.5 μm cutoff wavelength and span the longer 6-10 μm (NC2) band. We present calibration and performance results from two recently produced pathfinder SCAs, one for each band, manufactured by Teledyne Imaging Sensors with development guidance from the University of Arizona, the University of Rochester, and JPL. Both devices demonstrate the requisite low dark current, high well depth, and high quantum efficiency, exceeding mission requirements.
We discuss the joint development by Penn State University (PSU) and Teledyne Imaging Systems (TIS) of hybrid CMOS detectors for X-ray astronomy, and specifically the development over the past 10 years of a new event-driven X-ray detector for future astronomy missions. This novel X-ray detector is designed to perform onchip event recognition and to read out only pixels containing X-ray events. With the exception of analog power supply voltages, the detector is digital in/digital out, reducing off-chip electronics to a minimum. It operates at frame rates of over 1000 frames per second, providing excellent performance for bright X-ray sources and/or high-throughput optics. The pixel size is 40 × 40 microns, and we are fabricating devices with 550 × 550 pixels.
A 2K x 2K 10 µm cutoff HgCdTe array for background-limited space astronomy has been developed by Teledyne Imaging Sensors to specifications set by JPL, and demonstrated by University of Rochester at a focal plane temperature of 40K for the proposed JPL Near-Earth Object Camera (NEOCam) survey mission under the NASA Planetary Defense Coordination Office. We describe the detector performance for the first large format monolithic HgCdTe detector array tested, including the dark current, well depth, dark current vs. temperature, quantum efficiency, latent image performance, and read noise.
The CHROMA (Configurable Hyperspectral Readout for Multiple Applications) is an advanced Focal Plane Array (FPA) designed for visible-infrared imaging spectroscopy. Using Teledyne’s latest substrateremoved HgCdTe detector, the CHROMA FPA has very low dark current, low readout noise and high, stable quantum efficiency from the deep blue (390nm) to the cutoff wavelength. CHROMA has a pixel pitch of 30 microns and is available in array formats ranging from 320×480 to 1600×480 pixels. Users generally disperse spectra over the 480 pixel-length columns and image spatially over the n×160 pixellength rows, where n=2, 4, 8, 10. The CHROMA Readout Integrated Circuit (ROIC) has Correlated Double Sampling (CDS) in pixel and generates its own internal bias signals and clocks. This paper presents the measured performance of the CHROMA FPA with 2.5 micron cutoff wavelength including the characterization of noise versus pixel gain, power dissipation and quantum efficiency.
A High Resolution Near-Infrared (NIR) Camera has been developed and tested. This NIR camera uses a HgCdTe detector array which allows for imaging at high operating temperatures. The camera's format is 640x512 pixels with an 18 μm pitch. We have obtained high broadband spectral response from 0.9 to 2.0 micron with near 100% optical fill factor. The camera is designed as a turnkey system that uses the industry standard Camera Link digital interface. The electronics are located remotely from the sensor head allowing it to be adapted to existing optical systems. This compact camera has been targeted for military, scientific and telecommunication applications. This paper will detail the measured camera performance.
With the increased demand for IR sensor and surveillance systems, there is a growing need for technologies to support their operational readiness. Measurement of sensor characteristics such as sensitivity, MRTD, and dynamic range should be standard in all mission critical systems. The Real-Time Infrared Test Set (RTIR) is a portable system designed to provide in-the-field calibration and testing of IR imaging systems and seekers. RTIR uses the high volume manufacturing processes of the Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) and the Micro Electromechanical Systems (MEMS) technology to produce a Thermal Pixel Array (TPA). State-of-the-art CMOS processes define all the necessary on-chip digital and analog electronics. When properly driven, this array generates variable temperature,synthetic IR scenes. A nonuniformity measurement of several TPAs is presented.
Santa Barbara Infrared's (SBIR) MIRAGE (Multispectral InfraRed Animation Generation Equipment) is a state-of-the- art dynamic infrared scene projector system. Imagery from the first MIRAGE system was presented to the scene simulation community during the SPIE AeroSense 99 Symposium. Since that time, SBIR has delivered ten MIRAGE systems. This paper will provide a brief overview of the MIRAGE system and discuss developments in the emitter materials science effort. Overview data will be shown demonstrating the successful development of a high temperature, high stability emitter structure.
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