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    發布時間:2020-10-06 12:03 原文鏈接: 宇宙觀測用近紅外相機

    Parent page: NIRCam Instrumentation 
    See also: NIRCam Detector SubarraysNIRCam Detector ReadoutNIRCam Detector Readout PatternsNIRCam Detector Performance 

    NIRCam employs 10 Teledyne HgCdTe H2RG detectors, each controlled by a separate SIDECAR?ASIC1.

    Each detector contains 2048 × 2048 pixels; the interior 2040 × 2040 pixels are light-sensitive photodiodes, and the outer 4-pixel wide border consists of reference pixels used to measure temperature and bias voltage drifts during exposures. These drifts are removed by the image reduction pipeline.

    Eight of the detectors, manufactured with a 2.5 μm cutoff, are used in the short wavelength channel (0.6–2.3 μm). Two detectors with ~5 μm cutoffs are used in the long wavelength channel (2.4–5.0 μm). The short wavelength detectors have lower dark current (see NIRCam Detector Performance).

    Each detector is referred to as a sensor chip assembly (SCA). In each NIRCam module, the four short wavelength detectors are arranged in a 2 × 2 focal plane array (FPA). When imaging the sky, the short wavelength pixels have twice the spatial resolution (0.031″) as the long wavelength pixels (0.063"). The field of view of each short wavelength FPA overlaps with that of the single long wavelength SCA in each module. Both wavelength channels cover approximately the same 2.2' × 2.2' area on the sky with each module, for a total 9.7 arcmin2 field of view when observing with both modules.

    During an integration, the detectors accumulate charge while being read out multiple times non-destructively according to readout patterns. Users may opt to either read out the full detector or smaller subarrays for faster readout times. When the integration is complete, the detectors are reset, releasing the charge.

    Accumulated analog charges are converted to 16-bit digital signals with up to 65,535 data counts (analog-to-digital units, or ADU) in each pixel. The gain values are roughly two electrons per data count (2 e/ADU) on average, varying among the detectors as well as among pixels within each detector (see the Detector Performance article).

    Figure 1. Field of view received by the 10 NIRCam detectors

    Field of view received by the 10 NIRCam detectors

    The short wavelength detectors are numbered 1–4 in each module (A and B), as shown in blue. The long wavelength detectors are numbered "5" in each module, as shown in red. Orientation is shown relative to the JWST field of view with the V3 axis up and V2 axis left.


    Table 1. Detector properties

    Wavelength response ?0.4–2.5 μm0.4–5.1 μm
    Number of detectors82
    Pixels (including reference)2048 × 2048 pixels2048 × 2048 pixels
    Pixels (light sensitive)2040 × 2040 pixels2040 × 2040 pixels
    Pixel pitch (physical size) ?18 μm18 μm
    Pixel scale (on sky)0.031″/pixel0.063″/pixel
    Nyquist wavelength *2.0 μm4.0 μm
    Field of view (each detector)64" × 64"129" × 129"
    Field of view (all detectors)2 × 2.2′ × 2.2′ (with 4–5” gaps)2 × 2.2′ × 2.2′

    ? Filters and dichroics limit these wavelength ranges.
    ? Distance between centers of adjacent pixels.
    * PSF FWHM ~2 pixels at this wavelength; undersampled at lower wavelengths. For coronagraphy, the Nyquist wavelength is shorter.


    Figure 2. NIRCam 2K × 2K HgCdTe detector from Teledyne imaging sensors

     

    Figure 3. Focal plane array (2 × 2) of NIRCam short wavelength detectors

    https://jwst-docs.stsci.edu/display/JTI/NIRCam+Detectors

    Field-of-view figures

    Figure 1. NIRCam modules field of view

    NIRCam field of view
    The NIRCam field of view in observatory coordinates (V3 up, V2 left). Observations may be obtained simultaneously with both modules using all 10 detectors at short (0.6–2.3 μm) and long (2.4–5.0 μm) wavelengths. The coronagraphs are used to image regions of the sky outside the imaging/grism field of view. When in use, these regions are projected onto the detectors by optical wedges located on Lyot stops in the pupil plane.


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